1 /* 2 * linux/fs/buffer.c 3 * 4 * Copyright (C) 1991, 1992, 2002 Linus Torvalds 5 */ 6 7 /* 8 * Start bdflush() with kernel_thread not syscall - Paul Gortmaker, 12/95 9 * 10 * Removed a lot of unnecessary code and simplified things now that 11 * the buffer cache isn't our primary cache - Andrew Tridgell 12/96 12 * 13 * Speed up hash, lru, and free list operations. Use gfp() for allocating 14 * hash table, use SLAB cache for buffer heads. SMP threading. -DaveM 15 * 16 * Added 32k buffer block sizes - these are required older ARM systems. - RMK 17 * 18 * async buffer flushing, 1999 Andrea Arcangeli <andrea@suse.de> 19 */ 20 21 #include <linux/kernel.h> 22 #include <linux/syscalls.h> 23 #include <linux/fs.h> 24 #include <linux/mm.h> 25 #include <linux/percpu.h> 26 #include <linux/slab.h> 27 #include <linux/capability.h> 28 #include <linux/blkdev.h> 29 #include <linux/file.h> 30 #include <linux/quotaops.h> 31 #include <linux/highmem.h> 32 #include <linux/module.h> 33 #include <linux/writeback.h> 34 #include <linux/hash.h> 35 #include <linux/suspend.h> 36 #include <linux/buffer_head.h> 37 #include <linux/task_io_accounting_ops.h> 38 #include <linux/bio.h> 39 #include <linux/notifier.h> 40 #include <linux/cpu.h> 41 #include <linux/bitops.h> 42 #include <linux/mpage.h> 43 #include <linux/bit_spinlock.h> 44 45 static int fsync_buffers_list(spinlock_t *lock, struct list_head *list); 46 47 #define BH_ENTRY(list) list_entry((list), struct buffer_head, b_assoc_buffers) 48 49 inline void 50 init_buffer(struct buffer_head *bh, bh_end_io_t *handler, void *private) 51 { 52 bh->b_end_io = handler; 53 bh->b_private = private; 54 } 55 56 static int sync_buffer(void *word) 57 { 58 struct block_device *bd; 59 struct buffer_head *bh 60 = container_of(word, struct buffer_head, b_state); 61 62 smp_mb(); 63 bd = bh->b_bdev; 64 if (bd) 65 blk_run_address_space(bd->bd_inode->i_mapping); 66 io_schedule(); 67 return 0; 68 } 69 70 void __lock_buffer(struct buffer_head *bh) 71 { 72 wait_on_bit_lock(&bh->b_state, BH_Lock, sync_buffer, 73 TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE); 74 } 75 EXPORT_SYMBOL(__lock_buffer); 76 77 void unlock_buffer(struct buffer_head *bh) 78 { 79 clear_bit_unlock(BH_Lock, &bh->b_state); 80 smp_mb__after_clear_bit(); 81 wake_up_bit(&bh->b_state, BH_Lock); 82 } 83 84 /* 85 * Block until a buffer comes unlocked. This doesn't stop it 86 * from becoming locked again - you have to lock it yourself 87 * if you want to preserve its state. 88 */ 89 void __wait_on_buffer(struct buffer_head * bh) 90 { 91 wait_on_bit(&bh->b_state, BH_Lock, sync_buffer, TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE); 92 } 93 94 static void 95 __clear_page_buffers(struct page *page) 96 { 97 ClearPagePrivate(page); 98 set_page_private(page, 0); 99 page_cache_release(page); 100 } 101 102 103 static int quiet_error(struct buffer_head *bh) 104 { 105 if (!test_bit(BH_Quiet, &bh->b_state) && printk_ratelimit()) 106 return 0; 107 return 1; 108 } 109 110 111 static void buffer_io_error(struct buffer_head *bh) 112 { 113 char b[BDEVNAME_SIZE]; 114 printk(KERN_ERR "Buffer I/O error on device %s, logical block %Lu\n", 115 bdevname(bh->b_bdev, b), 116 (unsigned long long)bh->b_blocknr); 117 } 118 119 /* 120 * End-of-IO handler helper function which does not touch the bh after 121 * unlocking it. 122 * Note: unlock_buffer() sort-of does touch the bh after unlocking it, but 123 * a race there is benign: unlock_buffer() only use the bh's address for 124 * hashing after unlocking the buffer, so it doesn't actually touch the bh 125 * itself. 126 */ 127 static void __end_buffer_read_notouch(struct buffer_head *bh, int uptodate) 128 { 129 if (uptodate) { 130 set_buffer_uptodate(bh); 131 } else { 132 /* This happens, due to failed READA attempts. */ 133 clear_buffer_uptodate(bh); 134 } 135 unlock_buffer(bh); 136 } 137 138 /* 139 * Default synchronous end-of-IO handler.. Just mark it up-to-date and 140 * unlock the buffer. This is what ll_rw_block uses too. 141 */ 142 void end_buffer_read_sync(struct buffer_head *bh, int uptodate) 143 { 144 __end_buffer_read_notouch(bh, uptodate); 145 put_bh(bh); 146 } 147 148 void end_buffer_write_sync(struct buffer_head *bh, int uptodate) 149 { 150 char b[BDEVNAME_SIZE]; 151 152 if (uptodate) { 153 set_buffer_uptodate(bh); 154 } else { 155 if (!buffer_eopnotsupp(bh) && !quiet_error(bh)) { 156 buffer_io_error(bh); 157 printk(KERN_WARNING "lost page write due to " 158 "I/O error on %s\n", 159 bdevname(bh->b_bdev, b)); 160 } 161 set_buffer_write_io_error(bh); 162 clear_buffer_uptodate(bh); 163 } 164 unlock_buffer(bh); 165 put_bh(bh); 166 } 167 168 /* 169 * Various filesystems appear to want __find_get_block to be non-blocking. 170 * But it's the page lock which protects the buffers. To get around this, 171 * we get exclusion from try_to_free_buffers with the blockdev mapping's 172 * private_lock. 173 * 174 * Hack idea: for the blockdev mapping, i_bufferlist_lock contention 175 * may be quite high. This code could TryLock the page, and if that 176 * succeeds, there is no need to take private_lock. (But if 177 * private_lock is contended then so is mapping->tree_lock). 178 */ 179 static struct buffer_head * 180 __find_get_block_slow(struct block_device *bdev, sector_t block) 181 { 182 struct inode *bd_inode = bdev->bd_inode; 183 struct address_space *bd_mapping = bd_inode->i_mapping; 184 struct buffer_head *ret = NULL; 185 pgoff_t index; 186 struct buffer_head *bh; 187 struct buffer_head *head; 188 struct page *page; 189 int all_mapped = 1; 190 191 index = block >> (PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT - bd_inode->i_blkbits); 192 page = find_get_page(bd_mapping, index); 193 if (!page) 194 goto out; 195 196 spin_lock(&bd_mapping->private_lock); 197 if (!page_has_buffers(page)) 198 goto out_unlock; 199 head = page_buffers(page); 200 bh = head; 201 do { 202 if (!buffer_mapped(bh)) 203 all_mapped = 0; 204 else if (bh->b_blocknr == block) { 205 ret = bh; 206 get_bh(bh); 207 goto out_unlock; 208 } 209 bh = bh->b_this_page; 210 } while (bh != head); 211 212 /* we might be here because some of the buffers on this page are 213 * not mapped. This is due to various races between 214 * file io on the block device and getblk. It gets dealt with 215 * elsewhere, don't buffer_error if we had some unmapped buffers 216 */ 217 if (all_mapped) { 218 printk("__find_get_block_slow() failed. " 219 "block=%llu, b_blocknr=%llu\n", 220 (unsigned long long)block, 221 (unsigned long long)bh->b_blocknr); 222 printk("b_state=0x%08lx, b_size=%zu\n", 223 bh->b_state, bh->b_size); 224 printk("device blocksize: %d\n", 1 << bd_inode->i_blkbits); 225 } 226 out_unlock: 227 spin_unlock(&bd_mapping->private_lock); 228 page_cache_release(page); 229 out: 230 return ret; 231 } 232 233 /* If invalidate_buffers() will trash dirty buffers, it means some kind 234 of fs corruption is going on. Trashing dirty data always imply losing 235 information that was supposed to be just stored on the physical layer 236 by the user. 237 238 Thus invalidate_buffers in general usage is not allwowed to trash 239 dirty buffers. For example ioctl(FLSBLKBUF) expects dirty data to 240 be preserved. These buffers are simply skipped. 241 242 We also skip buffers which are still in use. For example this can 243 happen if a userspace program is reading the block device. 244 245 NOTE: In the case where the user removed a removable-media-disk even if 246 there's still dirty data not synced on disk (due a bug in the device driver 247 or due an error of the user), by not destroying the dirty buffers we could 248 generate corruption also on the next media inserted, thus a parameter is 249 necessary to handle this case in the most safe way possible (trying 250 to not corrupt also the new disk inserted with the data belonging to 251 the old now corrupted disk). Also for the ramdisk the natural thing 252 to do in order to release the ramdisk memory is to destroy dirty buffers. 253 254 These are two special cases. Normal usage imply the device driver 255 to issue a sync on the device (without waiting I/O completion) and 256 then an invalidate_buffers call that doesn't trash dirty buffers. 257 258 For handling cache coherency with the blkdev pagecache the 'update' case 259 is been introduced. It is needed to re-read from disk any pinned 260 buffer. NOTE: re-reading from disk is destructive so we can do it only 261 when we assume nobody is changing the buffercache under our I/O and when 262 we think the disk contains more recent information than the buffercache. 263 The update == 1 pass marks the buffers we need to update, the update == 2 264 pass does the actual I/O. */ 265 void invalidate_bdev(struct block_device *bdev) 266 { 267 struct address_space *mapping = bdev->bd_inode->i_mapping; 268 269 if (mapping->nrpages == 0) 270 return; 271 272 invalidate_bh_lrus(); 273 invalidate_mapping_pages(mapping, 0, -1); 274 } 275 276 /* 277 * Kick pdflush then try to free up some ZONE_NORMAL memory. 278 */ 279 static void free_more_memory(void) 280 { 281 struct zone *zone; 282 int nid; 283 284 wakeup_pdflush(1024); 285 yield(); 286 287 for_each_online_node(nid) { 288 (void)first_zones_zonelist(node_zonelist(nid, GFP_NOFS), 289 gfp_zone(GFP_NOFS), NULL, 290 &zone); 291 if (zone) 292 try_to_free_pages(node_zonelist(nid, GFP_NOFS), 0, 293 GFP_NOFS, NULL); 294 } 295 } 296 297 /* 298 * I/O completion handler for block_read_full_page() - pages 299 * which come unlocked at the end of I/O. 300 */ 301 static void end_buffer_async_read(struct buffer_head *bh, int uptodate) 302 { 303 unsigned long flags; 304 struct buffer_head *first; 305 struct buffer_head *tmp; 306 struct page *page; 307 int page_uptodate = 1; 308 309 BUG_ON(!buffer_async_read(bh)); 310 311 page = bh->b_page; 312 if (uptodate) { 313 set_buffer_uptodate(bh); 314 } else { 315 clear_buffer_uptodate(bh); 316 if (!quiet_error(bh)) 317 buffer_io_error(bh); 318 SetPageError(page); 319 } 320 321 /* 322 * Be _very_ careful from here on. Bad things can happen if 323 * two buffer heads end IO at almost the same time and both 324 * decide that the page is now completely done. 325 */ 326 first = page_buffers(page); 327 local_irq_save(flags); 328 bit_spin_lock(BH_Uptodate_Lock, &first->b_state); 329 clear_buffer_async_read(bh); 330 unlock_buffer(bh); 331 tmp = bh; 332 do { 333 if (!buffer_uptodate(tmp)) 334 page_uptodate = 0; 335 if (buffer_async_read(tmp)) { 336 BUG_ON(!buffer_locked(tmp)); 337 goto still_busy; 338 } 339 tmp = tmp->b_this_page; 340 } while (tmp != bh); 341 bit_spin_unlock(BH_Uptodate_Lock, &first->b_state); 342 local_irq_restore(flags); 343 344 /* 345 * If none of the buffers had errors and they are all 346 * uptodate then we can set the page uptodate. 347 */ 348 if (page_uptodate && !PageError(page)) 349 SetPageUptodate(page); 350 unlock_page(page); 351 return; 352 353 still_busy: 354 bit_spin_unlock(BH_Uptodate_Lock, &first->b_state); 355 local_irq_restore(flags); 356 return; 357 } 358 359 /* 360 * Completion handler for block_write_full_page() - pages which are unlocked 361 * during I/O, and which have PageWriteback cleared upon I/O completion. 362 */ 363 void end_buffer_async_write(struct buffer_head *bh, int uptodate) 364 { 365 char b[BDEVNAME_SIZE]; 366 unsigned long flags; 367 struct buffer_head *first; 368 struct buffer_head *tmp; 369 struct page *page; 370 371 BUG_ON(!buffer_async_write(bh)); 372 373 page = bh->b_page; 374 if (uptodate) { 375 set_buffer_uptodate(bh); 376 } else { 377 if (!quiet_error(bh)) { 378 buffer_io_error(bh); 379 printk(KERN_WARNING "lost page write due to " 380 "I/O error on %s\n", 381 bdevname(bh->b_bdev, b)); 382 } 383 set_bit(AS_EIO, &page->mapping->flags); 384 set_buffer_write_io_error(bh); 385 clear_buffer_uptodate(bh); 386 SetPageError(page); 387 } 388 389 first = page_buffers(page); 390 local_irq_save(flags); 391 bit_spin_lock(BH_Uptodate_Lock, &first->b_state); 392 393 clear_buffer_async_write(bh); 394 unlock_buffer(bh); 395 tmp = bh->b_this_page; 396 while (tmp != bh) { 397 if (buffer_async_write(tmp)) { 398 BUG_ON(!buffer_locked(tmp)); 399 goto still_busy; 400 } 401 tmp = tmp->b_this_page; 402 } 403 bit_spin_unlock(BH_Uptodate_Lock, &first->b_state); 404 local_irq_restore(flags); 405 end_page_writeback(page); 406 return; 407 408 still_busy: 409 bit_spin_unlock(BH_Uptodate_Lock, &first->b_state); 410 local_irq_restore(flags); 411 return; 412 } 413 414 /* 415 * If a page's buffers are under async readin (end_buffer_async_read 416 * completion) then there is a possibility that another thread of 417 * control could lock one of the buffers after it has completed 418 * but while some of the other buffers have not completed. This 419 * locked buffer would confuse end_buffer_async_read() into not unlocking 420 * the page. So the absence of BH_Async_Read tells end_buffer_async_read() 421 * that this buffer is not under async I/O. 422 * 423 * The page comes unlocked when it has no locked buffer_async buffers 424 * left. 425 * 426 * PageLocked prevents anyone starting new async I/O reads any of 427 * the buffers. 428 * 429 * PageWriteback is used to prevent simultaneous writeout of the same 430 * page. 431 * 432 * PageLocked prevents anyone from starting writeback of a page which is 433 * under read I/O (PageWriteback is only ever set against a locked page). 434 */ 435 static void mark_buffer_async_read(struct buffer_head *bh) 436 { 437 bh->b_end_io = end_buffer_async_read; 438 set_buffer_async_read(bh); 439 } 440 441 void mark_buffer_async_write_endio(struct buffer_head *bh, 442 bh_end_io_t *handler) 443 { 444 bh->b_end_io = handler; 445 set_buffer_async_write(bh); 446 } 447 448 void mark_buffer_async_write(struct buffer_head *bh) 449 { 450 mark_buffer_async_write_endio(bh, end_buffer_async_write); 451 } 452 EXPORT_SYMBOL(mark_buffer_async_write); 453 454 455 /* 456 * fs/buffer.c contains helper functions for buffer-backed address space's 457 * fsync functions. A common requirement for buffer-based filesystems is 458 * that certain data from the backing blockdev needs to be written out for 459 * a successful fsync(). For example, ext2 indirect blocks need to be 460 * written back and waited upon before fsync() returns. 461 * 462 * The functions mark_buffer_inode_dirty(), fsync_inode_buffers(), 463 * inode_has_buffers() and invalidate_inode_buffers() are provided for the 464 * management of a list of dependent buffers at ->i_mapping->private_list. 465 * 466 * Locking is a little subtle: try_to_free_buffers() will remove buffers 467 * from their controlling inode's queue when they are being freed. But 468 * try_to_free_buffers() will be operating against the *blockdev* mapping 469 * at the time, not against the S_ISREG file which depends on those buffers. 470 * So the locking for private_list is via the private_lock in the address_space 471 * which backs the buffers. Which is different from the address_space 472 * against which the buffers are listed. So for a particular address_space, 473 * mapping->private_lock does *not* protect mapping->private_list! In fact, 474 * mapping->private_list will always be protected by the backing blockdev's 475 * ->private_lock. 476 * 477 * Which introduces a requirement: all buffers on an address_space's 478 * ->private_list must be from the same address_space: the blockdev's. 479 * 480 * address_spaces which do not place buffers at ->private_list via these 481 * utility functions are free to use private_lock and private_list for 482 * whatever they want. The only requirement is that list_empty(private_list) 483 * be true at clear_inode() time. 484 * 485 * FIXME: clear_inode should not call invalidate_inode_buffers(). The 486 * filesystems should do that. invalidate_inode_buffers() should just go 487 * BUG_ON(!list_empty). 488 * 489 * FIXME: mark_buffer_dirty_inode() is a data-plane operation. It should 490 * take an address_space, not an inode. And it should be called 491 * mark_buffer_dirty_fsync() to clearly define why those buffers are being 492 * queued up. 493 * 494 * FIXME: mark_buffer_dirty_inode() doesn't need to add the buffer to the 495 * list if it is already on a list. Because if the buffer is on a list, 496 * it *must* already be on the right one. If not, the filesystem is being 497 * silly. This will save a ton of locking. But first we have to ensure 498 * that buffers are taken *off* the old inode's list when they are freed 499 * (presumably in truncate). That requires careful auditing of all 500 * filesystems (do it inside bforget()). It could also be done by bringing 501 * b_inode back. 502 */ 503 504 /* 505 * The buffer's backing address_space's private_lock must be held 506 */ 507 static void __remove_assoc_queue(struct buffer_head *bh) 508 { 509 list_del_init(&bh->b_assoc_buffers); 510 WARN_ON(!bh->b_assoc_map); 511 if (buffer_write_io_error(bh)) 512 set_bit(AS_EIO, &bh->b_assoc_map->flags); 513 bh->b_assoc_map = NULL; 514 } 515 516 int inode_has_buffers(struct inode *inode) 517 { 518 return !list_empty(&inode->i_data.private_list); 519 } 520 521 /* 522 * osync is designed to support O_SYNC io. It waits synchronously for 523 * all already-submitted IO to complete, but does not queue any new 524 * writes to the disk. 525 * 526 * To do O_SYNC writes, just queue the buffer writes with ll_rw_block as 527 * you dirty the buffers, and then use osync_inode_buffers to wait for 528 * completion. Any other dirty buffers which are not yet queued for 529 * write will not be flushed to disk by the osync. 530 */ 531 static int osync_buffers_list(spinlock_t *lock, struct list_head *list) 532 { 533 struct buffer_head *bh; 534 struct list_head *p; 535 int err = 0; 536 537 spin_lock(lock); 538 repeat: 539 list_for_each_prev(p, list) { 540 bh = BH_ENTRY(p); 541 if (buffer_locked(bh)) { 542 get_bh(bh); 543 spin_unlock(lock); 544 wait_on_buffer(bh); 545 if (!buffer_uptodate(bh)) 546 err = -EIO; 547 brelse(bh); 548 spin_lock(lock); 549 goto repeat; 550 } 551 } 552 spin_unlock(lock); 553 return err; 554 } 555 556 void do_thaw_all(struct work_struct *work) 557 { 558 struct super_block *sb; 559 char b[BDEVNAME_SIZE]; 560 561 spin_lock(&sb_lock); 562 restart: 563 list_for_each_entry(sb, &super_blocks, s_list) { 564 sb->s_count++; 565 spin_unlock(&sb_lock); 566 down_read(&sb->s_umount); 567 while (sb->s_bdev && !thaw_bdev(sb->s_bdev, sb)) 568 printk(KERN_WARNING "Emergency Thaw on %s\n", 569 bdevname(sb->s_bdev, b)); 570 up_read(&sb->s_umount); 571 spin_lock(&sb_lock); 572 if (__put_super_and_need_restart(sb)) 573 goto restart; 574 } 575 spin_unlock(&sb_lock); 576 kfree(work); 577 printk(KERN_WARNING "Emergency Thaw complete\n"); 578 } 579 580 /** 581 * emergency_thaw_all -- forcibly thaw every frozen filesystem 582 * 583 * Used for emergency unfreeze of all filesystems via SysRq 584 */ 585 void emergency_thaw_all(void) 586 { 587 struct work_struct *work; 588 589 work = kmalloc(sizeof(*work), GFP_ATOMIC); 590 if (work) { 591 INIT_WORK(work, do_thaw_all); 592 schedule_work(work); 593 } 594 } 595 596 /** 597 * sync_mapping_buffers - write out & wait upon a mapping's "associated" buffers 598 * @mapping: the mapping which wants those buffers written 599 * 600 * Starts I/O against the buffers at mapping->private_list, and waits upon 601 * that I/O. 602 * 603 * Basically, this is a convenience function for fsync(). 604 * @mapping is a file or directory which needs those buffers to be written for 605 * a successful fsync(). 606 */ 607 int sync_mapping_buffers(struct address_space *mapping) 608 { 609 struct address_space *buffer_mapping = mapping->assoc_mapping; 610 611 if (buffer_mapping == NULL || list_empty(&mapping->private_list)) 612 return 0; 613 614 return fsync_buffers_list(&buffer_mapping->private_lock, 615 &mapping->private_list); 616 } 617 EXPORT_SYMBOL(sync_mapping_buffers); 618 619 /* 620 * Called when we've recently written block `bblock', and it is known that 621 * `bblock' was for a buffer_boundary() buffer. This means that the block at 622 * `bblock + 1' is probably a dirty indirect block. Hunt it down and, if it's 623 * dirty, schedule it for IO. So that indirects merge nicely with their data. 624 */ 625 void write_boundary_block(struct block_device *bdev, 626 sector_t bblock, unsigned blocksize) 627 { 628 struct buffer_head *bh = __find_get_block(bdev, bblock + 1, blocksize); 629 if (bh) { 630 if (buffer_dirty(bh)) 631 ll_rw_block(WRITE, 1, &bh); 632 put_bh(bh); 633 } 634 } 635 636 void mark_buffer_dirty_inode(struct buffer_head *bh, struct inode *inode) 637 { 638 struct address_space *mapping = inode->i_mapping; 639 struct address_space *buffer_mapping = bh->b_page->mapping; 640 641 mark_buffer_dirty(bh); 642 if (!mapping->assoc_mapping) { 643 mapping->assoc_mapping = buffer_mapping; 644 } else { 645 BUG_ON(mapping->assoc_mapping != buffer_mapping); 646 } 647 if (!bh->b_assoc_map) { 648 spin_lock(&buffer_mapping->private_lock); 649 list_move_tail(&bh->b_assoc_buffers, 650 &mapping->private_list); 651 bh->b_assoc_map = mapping; 652 spin_unlock(&buffer_mapping->private_lock); 653 } 654 } 655 EXPORT_SYMBOL(mark_buffer_dirty_inode); 656 657 /* 658 * Mark the page dirty, and set it dirty in the radix tree, and mark the inode 659 * dirty. 660 * 661 * If warn is true, then emit a warning if the page is not uptodate and has 662 * not been truncated. 663 */ 664 static void __set_page_dirty(struct page *page, 665 struct address_space *mapping, int warn) 666 { 667 spin_lock_irq(&mapping->tree_lock); 668 if (page->mapping) { /* Race with truncate? */ 669 WARN_ON_ONCE(warn && !PageUptodate(page)); 670 account_page_dirtied(page, mapping); 671 radix_tree_tag_set(&mapping->page_tree, 672 page_index(page), PAGECACHE_TAG_DIRTY); 673 } 674 spin_unlock_irq(&mapping->tree_lock); 675 __mark_inode_dirty(mapping->host, I_DIRTY_PAGES); 676 } 677 678 /* 679 * Add a page to the dirty page list. 680 * 681 * It is a sad fact of life that this function is called from several places 682 * deeply under spinlocking. It may not sleep. 683 * 684 * If the page has buffers, the uptodate buffers are set dirty, to preserve 685 * dirty-state coherency between the page and the buffers. It the page does 686 * not have buffers then when they are later attached they will all be set 687 * dirty. 688 * 689 * The buffers are dirtied before the page is dirtied. There's a small race 690 * window in which a writepage caller may see the page cleanness but not the 691 * buffer dirtiness. That's fine. If this code were to set the page dirty 692 * before the buffers, a concurrent writepage caller could clear the page dirty 693 * bit, see a bunch of clean buffers and we'd end up with dirty buffers/clean 694 * page on the dirty page list. 695 * 696 * We use private_lock to lock against try_to_free_buffers while using the 697 * page's buffer list. Also use this to protect against clean buffers being 698 * added to the page after it was set dirty. 699 * 700 * FIXME: may need to call ->reservepage here as well. That's rather up to the 701 * address_space though. 702 */ 703 int __set_page_dirty_buffers(struct page *page) 704 { 705 int newly_dirty; 706 struct address_space *mapping = page_mapping(page); 707 708 if (unlikely(!mapping)) 709 return !TestSetPageDirty(page); 710 711 spin_lock(&mapping->private_lock); 712 if (page_has_buffers(page)) { 713 struct buffer_head *head = page_buffers(page); 714 struct buffer_head *bh = head; 715 716 do { 717 set_buffer_dirty(bh); 718 bh = bh->b_this_page; 719 } while (bh != head); 720 } 721 newly_dirty = !TestSetPageDirty(page); 722 spin_unlock(&mapping->private_lock); 723 724 if (newly_dirty) 725 __set_page_dirty(page, mapping, 1); 726 return newly_dirty; 727 } 728 EXPORT_SYMBOL(__set_page_dirty_buffers); 729 730 /* 731 * Write out and wait upon a list of buffers. 732 * 733 * We have conflicting pressures: we want to make sure that all 734 * initially dirty buffers get waited on, but that any subsequently 735 * dirtied buffers don't. After all, we don't want fsync to last 736 * forever if somebody is actively writing to the file. 737 * 738 * Do this in two main stages: first we copy dirty buffers to a 739 * temporary inode list, queueing the writes as we go. Then we clean 740 * up, waiting for those writes to complete. 741 * 742 * During this second stage, any subsequent updates to the file may end 743 * up refiling the buffer on the original inode's dirty list again, so 744 * there is a chance we will end up with a buffer queued for write but 745 * not yet completed on that list. So, as a final cleanup we go through 746 * the osync code to catch these locked, dirty buffers without requeuing 747 * any newly dirty buffers for write. 748 */ 749 static int fsync_buffers_list(spinlock_t *lock, struct list_head *list) 750 { 751 struct buffer_head *bh; 752 struct list_head tmp; 753 struct address_space *mapping, *prev_mapping = NULL; 754 int err = 0, err2; 755 756 INIT_LIST_HEAD(&tmp); 757 758 spin_lock(lock); 759 while (!list_empty(list)) { 760 bh = BH_ENTRY(list->next); 761 mapping = bh->b_assoc_map; 762 __remove_assoc_queue(bh); 763 /* Avoid race with mark_buffer_dirty_inode() which does 764 * a lockless check and we rely on seeing the dirty bit */ 765 smp_mb(); 766 if (buffer_dirty(bh) || buffer_locked(bh)) { 767 list_add(&bh->b_assoc_buffers, &tmp); 768 bh->b_assoc_map = mapping; 769 if (buffer_dirty(bh)) { 770 get_bh(bh); 771 spin_unlock(lock); 772 /* 773 * Ensure any pending I/O completes so that 774 * ll_rw_block() actually writes the current 775 * contents - it is a noop if I/O is still in 776 * flight on potentially older contents. 777 */ 778 ll_rw_block(SWRITE_SYNC_PLUG, 1, &bh); 779 780 /* 781 * Kick off IO for the previous mapping. Note 782 * that we will not run the very last mapping, 783 * wait_on_buffer() will do that for us 784 * through sync_buffer(). 785 */ 786 if (prev_mapping && prev_mapping != mapping) 787 blk_run_address_space(prev_mapping); 788 prev_mapping = mapping; 789 790 brelse(bh); 791 spin_lock(lock); 792 } 793 } 794 } 795 796 while (!list_empty(&tmp)) { 797 bh = BH_ENTRY(tmp.prev); 798 get_bh(bh); 799 mapping = bh->b_assoc_map; 800 __remove_assoc_queue(bh); 801 /* Avoid race with mark_buffer_dirty_inode() which does 802 * a lockless check and we rely on seeing the dirty bit */ 803 smp_mb(); 804 if (buffer_dirty(bh)) { 805 list_add(&bh->b_assoc_buffers, 806 &mapping->private_list); 807 bh->b_assoc_map = mapping; 808 } 809 spin_unlock(lock); 810 wait_on_buffer(bh); 811 if (!buffer_uptodate(bh)) 812 err = -EIO; 813 brelse(bh); 814 spin_lock(lock); 815 } 816 817 spin_unlock(lock); 818 err2 = osync_buffers_list(lock, list); 819 if (err) 820 return err; 821 else 822 return err2; 823 } 824 825 /* 826 * Invalidate any and all dirty buffers on a given inode. We are 827 * probably unmounting the fs, but that doesn't mean we have already 828 * done a sync(). Just drop the buffers from the inode list. 829 * 830 * NOTE: we take the inode's blockdev's mapping's private_lock. Which 831 * assumes that all the buffers are against the blockdev. Not true 832 * for reiserfs. 833 */ 834 void invalidate_inode_buffers(struct inode *inode) 835 { 836 if (inode_has_buffers(inode)) { 837 struct address_space *mapping = &inode->i_data; 838 struct list_head *list = &mapping->private_list; 839 struct address_space *buffer_mapping = mapping->assoc_mapping; 840 841 spin_lock(&buffer_mapping->private_lock); 842 while (!list_empty(list)) 843 __remove_assoc_queue(BH_ENTRY(list->next)); 844 spin_unlock(&buffer_mapping->private_lock); 845 } 846 } 847 EXPORT_SYMBOL(invalidate_inode_buffers); 848 849 /* 850 * Remove any clean buffers from the inode's buffer list. This is called 851 * when we're trying to free the inode itself. Those buffers can pin it. 852 * 853 * Returns true if all buffers were removed. 854 */ 855 int remove_inode_buffers(struct inode *inode) 856 { 857 int ret = 1; 858 859 if (inode_has_buffers(inode)) { 860 struct address_space *mapping = &inode->i_data; 861 struct list_head *list = &mapping->private_list; 862 struct address_space *buffer_mapping = mapping->assoc_mapping; 863 864 spin_lock(&buffer_mapping->private_lock); 865 while (!list_empty(list)) { 866 struct buffer_head *bh = BH_ENTRY(list->next); 867 if (buffer_dirty(bh)) { 868 ret = 0; 869 break; 870 } 871 __remove_assoc_queue(bh); 872 } 873 spin_unlock(&buffer_mapping->private_lock); 874 } 875 return ret; 876 } 877 878 /* 879 * Create the appropriate buffers when given a page for data area and 880 * the size of each buffer.. Use the bh->b_this_page linked list to 881 * follow the buffers created. Return NULL if unable to create more 882 * buffers. 883 * 884 * The retry flag is used to differentiate async IO (paging, swapping) 885 * which may not fail from ordinary buffer allocations. 886 */ 887 struct buffer_head *alloc_page_buffers(struct page *page, unsigned long size, 888 int retry) 889 { 890 struct buffer_head *bh, *head; 891 long offset; 892 893 try_again: 894 head = NULL; 895 offset = PAGE_SIZE; 896 while ((offset -= size) >= 0) { 897 bh = alloc_buffer_head(GFP_NOFS); 898 if (!bh) 899 goto no_grow; 900 901 bh->b_bdev = NULL; 902 bh->b_this_page = head; 903 bh->b_blocknr = -1; 904 head = bh; 905 906 bh->b_state = 0; 907 atomic_set(&bh->b_count, 0); 908 bh->b_private = NULL; 909 bh->b_size = size; 910 911 /* Link the buffer to its page */ 912 set_bh_page(bh, page, offset); 913 914 init_buffer(bh, NULL, NULL); 915 } 916 return head; 917 /* 918 * In case anything failed, we just free everything we got. 919 */ 920 no_grow: 921 if (head) { 922 do { 923 bh = head; 924 head = head->b_this_page; 925 free_buffer_head(bh); 926 } while (head); 927 } 928 929 /* 930 * Return failure for non-async IO requests. Async IO requests 931 * are not allowed to fail, so we have to wait until buffer heads 932 * become available. But we don't want tasks sleeping with 933 * partially complete buffers, so all were released above. 934 */ 935 if (!retry) 936 return NULL; 937 938 /* We're _really_ low on memory. Now we just 939 * wait for old buffer heads to become free due to 940 * finishing IO. Since this is an async request and 941 * the reserve list is empty, we're sure there are 942 * async buffer heads in use. 943 */ 944 free_more_memory(); 945 goto try_again; 946 } 947 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(alloc_page_buffers); 948 949 static inline void 950 link_dev_buffers(struct page *page, struct buffer_head *head) 951 { 952 struct buffer_head *bh, *tail; 953 954 bh = head; 955 do { 956 tail = bh; 957 bh = bh->b_this_page; 958 } while (bh); 959 tail->b_this_page = head; 960 attach_page_buffers(page, head); 961 } 962 963 /* 964 * Initialise the state of a blockdev page's buffers. 965 */ 966 static void 967 init_page_buffers(struct page *page, struct block_device *bdev, 968 sector_t block, int size) 969 { 970 struct buffer_head *head = page_buffers(page); 971 struct buffer_head *bh = head; 972 int uptodate = PageUptodate(page); 973 974 do { 975 if (!buffer_mapped(bh)) { 976 init_buffer(bh, NULL, NULL); 977 bh->b_bdev = bdev; 978 bh->b_blocknr = block; 979 if (uptodate) 980 set_buffer_uptodate(bh); 981 set_buffer_mapped(bh); 982 } 983 block++; 984 bh = bh->b_this_page; 985 } while (bh != head); 986 } 987 988 /* 989 * Create the page-cache page that contains the requested block. 990 * 991 * This is user purely for blockdev mappings. 992 */ 993 static struct page * 994 grow_dev_page(struct block_device *bdev, sector_t block, 995 pgoff_t index, int size) 996 { 997 struct inode *inode = bdev->bd_inode; 998 struct page *page; 999 struct buffer_head *bh; 1000 1001 page = find_or_create_page(inode->i_mapping, index, 1002 (mapping_gfp_mask(inode->i_mapping) & ~__GFP_FS)|__GFP_MOVABLE); 1003 if (!page) 1004 return NULL; 1005 1006 BUG_ON(!PageLocked(page)); 1007 1008 if (page_has_buffers(page)) { 1009 bh = page_buffers(page); 1010 if (bh->b_size == size) { 1011 init_page_buffers(page, bdev, block, size); 1012 return page; 1013 } 1014 if (!try_to_free_buffers(page)) 1015 goto failed; 1016 } 1017 1018 /* 1019 * Allocate some buffers for this page 1020 */ 1021 bh = alloc_page_buffers(page, size, 0); 1022 if (!bh) 1023 goto failed; 1024 1025 /* 1026 * Link the page to the buffers and initialise them. Take the 1027 * lock to be atomic wrt __find_get_block(), which does not 1028 * run under the page lock. 1029 */ 1030 spin_lock(&inode->i_mapping->private_lock); 1031 link_dev_buffers(page, bh); 1032 init_page_buffers(page, bdev, block, size); 1033 spin_unlock(&inode->i_mapping->private_lock); 1034 return page; 1035 1036 failed: 1037 BUG(); 1038 unlock_page(page); 1039 page_cache_release(page); 1040 return NULL; 1041 } 1042 1043 /* 1044 * Create buffers for the specified block device block's page. If 1045 * that page was dirty, the buffers are set dirty also. 1046 */ 1047 static int 1048 grow_buffers(struct block_device *bdev, sector_t block, int size) 1049 { 1050 struct page *page; 1051 pgoff_t index; 1052 int sizebits; 1053 1054 sizebits = -1; 1055 do { 1056 sizebits++; 1057 } while ((size << sizebits) < PAGE_SIZE); 1058 1059 index = block >> sizebits; 1060 1061 /* 1062 * Check for a block which wants to lie outside our maximum possible 1063 * pagecache index. (this comparison is done using sector_t types). 1064 */ 1065 if (unlikely(index != block >> sizebits)) { 1066 char b[BDEVNAME_SIZE]; 1067 1068 printk(KERN_ERR "%s: requested out-of-range block %llu for " 1069 "device %s\n", 1070 __func__, (unsigned long long)block, 1071 bdevname(bdev, b)); 1072 return -EIO; 1073 } 1074 block = index << sizebits; 1075 /* Create a page with the proper size buffers.. */ 1076 page = grow_dev_page(bdev, block, index, size); 1077 if (!page) 1078 return 0; 1079 unlock_page(page); 1080 page_cache_release(page); 1081 return 1; 1082 } 1083 1084 static struct buffer_head * 1085 __getblk_slow(struct block_device *bdev, sector_t block, int size) 1086 { 1087 /* Size must be multiple of hard sectorsize */ 1088 if (unlikely(size & (bdev_hardsect_size(bdev)-1) || 1089 (size < 512 || size > PAGE_SIZE))) { 1090 printk(KERN_ERR "getblk(): invalid block size %d requested\n", 1091 size); 1092 printk(KERN_ERR "hardsect size: %d\n", 1093 bdev_hardsect_size(bdev)); 1094 1095 dump_stack(); 1096 return NULL; 1097 } 1098 1099 for (;;) { 1100 struct buffer_head * bh; 1101 int ret; 1102 1103 bh = __find_get_block(bdev, block, size); 1104 if (bh) 1105 return bh; 1106 1107 ret = grow_buffers(bdev, block, size); 1108 if (ret < 0) 1109 return NULL; 1110 if (ret == 0) 1111 free_more_memory(); 1112 } 1113 } 1114 1115 /* 1116 * The relationship between dirty buffers and dirty pages: 1117 * 1118 * Whenever a page has any dirty buffers, the page's dirty bit is set, and 1119 * the page is tagged dirty in its radix tree. 1120 * 1121 * At all times, the dirtiness of the buffers represents the dirtiness of 1122 * subsections of the page. If the page has buffers, the page dirty bit is 1123 * merely a hint about the true dirty state. 1124 * 1125 * When a page is set dirty in its entirety, all its buffers are marked dirty 1126 * (if the page has buffers). 1127 * 1128 * When a buffer is marked dirty, its page is dirtied, but the page's other 1129 * buffers are not. 1130 * 1131 * Also. When blockdev buffers are explicitly read with bread(), they 1132 * individually become uptodate. But their backing page remains not 1133 * uptodate - even if all of its buffers are uptodate. A subsequent 1134 * block_read_full_page() against that page will discover all the uptodate 1135 * buffers, will set the page uptodate and will perform no I/O. 1136 */ 1137 1138 /** 1139 * mark_buffer_dirty - mark a buffer_head as needing writeout 1140 * @bh: the buffer_head to mark dirty 1141 * 1142 * mark_buffer_dirty() will set the dirty bit against the buffer, then set its 1143 * backing page dirty, then tag the page as dirty in its address_space's radix 1144 * tree and then attach the address_space's inode to its superblock's dirty 1145 * inode list. 1146 * 1147 * mark_buffer_dirty() is atomic. It takes bh->b_page->mapping->private_lock, 1148 * mapping->tree_lock and the global inode_lock. 1149 */ 1150 void mark_buffer_dirty(struct buffer_head *bh) 1151 { 1152 WARN_ON_ONCE(!buffer_uptodate(bh)); 1153 1154 /* 1155 * Very *carefully* optimize the it-is-already-dirty case. 1156 * 1157 * Don't let the final "is it dirty" escape to before we 1158 * perhaps modified the buffer. 1159 */ 1160 if (buffer_dirty(bh)) { 1161 smp_mb(); 1162 if (buffer_dirty(bh)) 1163 return; 1164 } 1165 1166 if (!test_set_buffer_dirty(bh)) { 1167 struct page *page = bh->b_page; 1168 if (!TestSetPageDirty(page)) 1169 __set_page_dirty(page, page_mapping(page), 0); 1170 } 1171 } 1172 1173 /* 1174 * Decrement a buffer_head's reference count. If all buffers against a page 1175 * have zero reference count, are clean and unlocked, and if the page is clean 1176 * and unlocked then try_to_free_buffers() may strip the buffers from the page 1177 * in preparation for freeing it (sometimes, rarely, buffers are removed from 1178 * a page but it ends up not being freed, and buffers may later be reattached). 1179 */ 1180 void __brelse(struct buffer_head * buf) 1181 { 1182 if (atomic_read(&buf->b_count)) { 1183 put_bh(buf); 1184 return; 1185 } 1186 WARN(1, KERN_ERR "VFS: brelse: Trying to free free buffer\n"); 1187 } 1188 1189 /* 1190 * bforget() is like brelse(), except it discards any 1191 * potentially dirty data. 1192 */ 1193 void __bforget(struct buffer_head *bh) 1194 { 1195 clear_buffer_dirty(bh); 1196 if (bh->b_assoc_map) { 1197 struct address_space *buffer_mapping = bh->b_page->mapping; 1198 1199 spin_lock(&buffer_mapping->private_lock); 1200 list_del_init(&bh->b_assoc_buffers); 1201 bh->b_assoc_map = NULL; 1202 spin_unlock(&buffer_mapping->private_lock); 1203 } 1204 __brelse(bh); 1205 } 1206 1207 static struct buffer_head *__bread_slow(struct buffer_head *bh) 1208 { 1209 lock_buffer(bh); 1210 if (buffer_uptodate(bh)) { 1211 unlock_buffer(bh); 1212 return bh; 1213 } else { 1214 get_bh(bh); 1215 bh->b_end_io = end_buffer_read_sync; 1216 submit_bh(READ, bh); 1217 wait_on_buffer(bh); 1218 if (buffer_uptodate(bh)) 1219 return bh; 1220 } 1221 brelse(bh); 1222 return NULL; 1223 } 1224 1225 /* 1226 * Per-cpu buffer LRU implementation. To reduce the cost of __find_get_block(). 1227 * The bhs[] array is sorted - newest buffer is at bhs[0]. Buffers have their 1228 * refcount elevated by one when they're in an LRU. A buffer can only appear 1229 * once in a particular CPU's LRU. A single buffer can be present in multiple 1230 * CPU's LRUs at the same time. 1231 * 1232 * This is a transparent caching front-end to sb_bread(), sb_getblk() and 1233 * sb_find_get_block(). 1234 * 1235 * The LRUs themselves only need locking against invalidate_bh_lrus. We use 1236 * a local interrupt disable for that. 1237 */ 1238 1239 #define BH_LRU_SIZE 8 1240 1241 struct bh_lru { 1242 struct buffer_head *bhs[BH_LRU_SIZE]; 1243 }; 1244 1245 static DEFINE_PER_CPU(struct bh_lru, bh_lrus) = {{ NULL }}; 1246 1247 #ifdef CONFIG_SMP 1248 #define bh_lru_lock() local_irq_disable() 1249 #define bh_lru_unlock() local_irq_enable() 1250 #else 1251 #define bh_lru_lock() preempt_disable() 1252 #define bh_lru_unlock() preempt_enable() 1253 #endif 1254 1255 static inline void check_irqs_on(void) 1256 { 1257 #ifdef irqs_disabled 1258 BUG_ON(irqs_disabled()); 1259 #endif 1260 } 1261 1262 /* 1263 * The LRU management algorithm is dopey-but-simple. Sorry. 1264 */ 1265 static void bh_lru_install(struct buffer_head *bh) 1266 { 1267 struct buffer_head *evictee = NULL; 1268 struct bh_lru *lru; 1269 1270 check_irqs_on(); 1271 bh_lru_lock(); 1272 lru = &__get_cpu_var(bh_lrus); 1273 if (lru->bhs[0] != bh) { 1274 struct buffer_head *bhs[BH_LRU_SIZE]; 1275 int in; 1276 int out = 0; 1277 1278 get_bh(bh); 1279 bhs[out++] = bh; 1280 for (in = 0; in < BH_LRU_SIZE; in++) { 1281 struct buffer_head *bh2 = lru->bhs[in]; 1282 1283 if (bh2 == bh) { 1284 __brelse(bh2); 1285 } else { 1286 if (out >= BH_LRU_SIZE) { 1287 BUG_ON(evictee != NULL); 1288 evictee = bh2; 1289 } else { 1290 bhs[out++] = bh2; 1291 } 1292 } 1293 } 1294 while (out < BH_LRU_SIZE) 1295 bhs[out++] = NULL; 1296 memcpy(lru->bhs, bhs, sizeof(bhs)); 1297 } 1298 bh_lru_unlock(); 1299 1300 if (evictee) 1301 __brelse(evictee); 1302 } 1303 1304 /* 1305 * Look up the bh in this cpu's LRU. If it's there, move it to the head. 1306 */ 1307 static struct buffer_head * 1308 lookup_bh_lru(struct block_device *bdev, sector_t block, unsigned size) 1309 { 1310 struct buffer_head *ret = NULL; 1311 struct bh_lru *lru; 1312 unsigned int i; 1313 1314 check_irqs_on(); 1315 bh_lru_lock(); 1316 lru = &__get_cpu_var(bh_lrus); 1317 for (i = 0; i < BH_LRU_SIZE; i++) { 1318 struct buffer_head *bh = lru->bhs[i]; 1319 1320 if (bh && bh->b_bdev == bdev && 1321 bh->b_blocknr == block && bh->b_size == size) { 1322 if (i) { 1323 while (i) { 1324 lru->bhs[i] = lru->bhs[i - 1]; 1325 i--; 1326 } 1327 lru->bhs[0] = bh; 1328 } 1329 get_bh(bh); 1330 ret = bh; 1331 break; 1332 } 1333 } 1334 bh_lru_unlock(); 1335 return ret; 1336 } 1337 1338 /* 1339 * Perform a pagecache lookup for the matching buffer. If it's there, refresh 1340 * it in the LRU and mark it as accessed. If it is not present then return 1341 * NULL 1342 */ 1343 struct buffer_head * 1344 __find_get_block(struct block_device *bdev, sector_t block, unsigned size) 1345 { 1346 struct buffer_head *bh = lookup_bh_lru(bdev, block, size); 1347 1348 if (bh == NULL) { 1349 bh = __find_get_block_slow(bdev, block); 1350 if (bh) 1351 bh_lru_install(bh); 1352 } 1353 if (bh) 1354 touch_buffer(bh); 1355 return bh; 1356 } 1357 EXPORT_SYMBOL(__find_get_block); 1358 1359 /* 1360 * __getblk will locate (and, if necessary, create) the buffer_head 1361 * which corresponds to the passed block_device, block and size. The 1362 * returned buffer has its reference count incremented. 1363 * 1364 * __getblk() cannot fail - it just keeps trying. If you pass it an 1365 * illegal block number, __getblk() will happily return a buffer_head 1366 * which represents the non-existent block. Very weird. 1367 * 1368 * __getblk() will lock up the machine if grow_dev_page's try_to_free_buffers() 1369 * attempt is failing. FIXME, perhaps? 1370 */ 1371 struct buffer_head * 1372 __getblk(struct block_device *bdev, sector_t block, unsigned size) 1373 { 1374 struct buffer_head *bh = __find_get_block(bdev, block, size); 1375 1376 might_sleep(); 1377 if (bh == NULL) 1378 bh = __getblk_slow(bdev, block, size); 1379 return bh; 1380 } 1381 EXPORT_SYMBOL(__getblk); 1382 1383 /* 1384 * Do async read-ahead on a buffer.. 1385 */ 1386 void __breadahead(struct block_device *bdev, sector_t block, unsigned size) 1387 { 1388 struct buffer_head *bh = __getblk(bdev, block, size); 1389 if (likely(bh)) { 1390 ll_rw_block(READA, 1, &bh); 1391 brelse(bh); 1392 } 1393 } 1394 EXPORT_SYMBOL(__breadahead); 1395 1396 /** 1397 * __bread() - reads a specified block and returns the bh 1398 * @bdev: the block_device to read from 1399 * @block: number of block 1400 * @size: size (in bytes) to read 1401 * 1402 * Reads a specified block, and returns buffer head that contains it. 1403 * It returns NULL if the block was unreadable. 1404 */ 1405 struct buffer_head * 1406 __bread(struct block_device *bdev, sector_t block, unsigned size) 1407 { 1408 struct buffer_head *bh = __getblk(bdev, block, size); 1409 1410 if (likely(bh) && !buffer_uptodate(bh)) 1411 bh = __bread_slow(bh); 1412 return bh; 1413 } 1414 EXPORT_SYMBOL(__bread); 1415 1416 /* 1417 * invalidate_bh_lrus() is called rarely - but not only at unmount. 1418 * This doesn't race because it runs in each cpu either in irq 1419 * or with preempt disabled. 1420 */ 1421 static void invalidate_bh_lru(void *arg) 1422 { 1423 struct bh_lru *b = &get_cpu_var(bh_lrus); 1424 int i; 1425 1426 for (i = 0; i < BH_LRU_SIZE; i++) { 1427 brelse(b->bhs[i]); 1428 b->bhs[i] = NULL; 1429 } 1430 put_cpu_var(bh_lrus); 1431 } 1432 1433 void invalidate_bh_lrus(void) 1434 { 1435 on_each_cpu(invalidate_bh_lru, NULL, 1); 1436 } 1437 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(invalidate_bh_lrus); 1438 1439 void set_bh_page(struct buffer_head *bh, 1440 struct page *page, unsigned long offset) 1441 { 1442 bh->b_page = page; 1443 BUG_ON(offset >= PAGE_SIZE); 1444 if (PageHighMem(page)) 1445 /* 1446 * This catches illegal uses and preserves the offset: 1447 */ 1448 bh->b_data = (char *)(0 + offset); 1449 else 1450 bh->b_data = page_address(page) + offset; 1451 } 1452 EXPORT_SYMBOL(set_bh_page); 1453 1454 /* 1455 * Called when truncating a buffer on a page completely. 1456 */ 1457 static void discard_buffer(struct buffer_head * bh) 1458 { 1459 lock_buffer(bh); 1460 clear_buffer_dirty(bh); 1461 bh->b_bdev = NULL; 1462 clear_buffer_mapped(bh); 1463 clear_buffer_req(bh); 1464 clear_buffer_new(bh); 1465 clear_buffer_delay(bh); 1466 clear_buffer_unwritten(bh); 1467 unlock_buffer(bh); 1468 } 1469 1470 /** 1471 * block_invalidatepage - invalidate part of all of a buffer-backed page 1472 * 1473 * @page: the page which is affected 1474 * @offset: the index of the truncation point 1475 * 1476 * block_invalidatepage() is called when all or part of the page has become 1477 * invalidatedby a truncate operation. 1478 * 1479 * block_invalidatepage() does not have to release all buffers, but it must 1480 * ensure that no dirty buffer is left outside @offset and that no I/O 1481 * is underway against any of the blocks which are outside the truncation 1482 * point. Because the caller is about to free (and possibly reuse) those 1483 * blocks on-disk. 1484 */ 1485 void block_invalidatepage(struct page *page, unsigned long offset) 1486 { 1487 struct buffer_head *head, *bh, *next; 1488 unsigned int curr_off = 0; 1489 1490 BUG_ON(!PageLocked(page)); 1491 if (!page_has_buffers(page)) 1492 goto out; 1493 1494 head = page_buffers(page); 1495 bh = head; 1496 do { 1497 unsigned int next_off = curr_off + bh->b_size; 1498 next = bh->b_this_page; 1499 1500 /* 1501 * is this block fully invalidated? 1502 */ 1503 if (offset <= curr_off) 1504 discard_buffer(bh); 1505 curr_off = next_off; 1506 bh = next; 1507 } while (bh != head); 1508 1509 /* 1510 * We release buffers only if the entire page is being invalidated. 1511 * The get_block cached value has been unconditionally invalidated, 1512 * so real IO is not possible anymore. 1513 */ 1514 if (offset == 0) 1515 try_to_release_page(page, 0); 1516 out: 1517 return; 1518 } 1519 EXPORT_SYMBOL(block_invalidatepage); 1520 1521 /* 1522 * We attach and possibly dirty the buffers atomically wrt 1523 * __set_page_dirty_buffers() via private_lock. try_to_free_buffers 1524 * is already excluded via the page lock. 1525 */ 1526 void create_empty_buffers(struct page *page, 1527 unsigned long blocksize, unsigned long b_state) 1528 { 1529 struct buffer_head *bh, *head, *tail; 1530 1531 head = alloc_page_buffers(page, blocksize, 1); 1532 bh = head; 1533 do { 1534 bh->b_state |= b_state; 1535 tail = bh; 1536 bh = bh->b_this_page; 1537 } while (bh); 1538 tail->b_this_page = head; 1539 1540 spin_lock(&page->mapping->private_lock); 1541 if (PageUptodate(page) || PageDirty(page)) { 1542 bh = head; 1543 do { 1544 if (PageDirty(page)) 1545 set_buffer_dirty(bh); 1546 if (PageUptodate(page)) 1547 set_buffer_uptodate(bh); 1548 bh = bh->b_this_page; 1549 } while (bh != head); 1550 } 1551 attach_page_buffers(page, head); 1552 spin_unlock(&page->mapping->private_lock); 1553 } 1554 EXPORT_SYMBOL(create_empty_buffers); 1555 1556 /* 1557 * We are taking a block for data and we don't want any output from any 1558 * buffer-cache aliases starting from return from that function and 1559 * until the moment when something will explicitly mark the buffer 1560 * dirty (hopefully that will not happen until we will free that block ;-) 1561 * We don't even need to mark it not-uptodate - nobody can expect 1562 * anything from a newly allocated buffer anyway. We used to used 1563 * unmap_buffer() for such invalidation, but that was wrong. We definitely 1564 * don't want to mark the alias unmapped, for example - it would confuse 1565 * anyone who might pick it with bread() afterwards... 1566 * 1567 * Also.. Note that bforget() doesn't lock the buffer. So there can 1568 * be writeout I/O going on against recently-freed buffers. We don't 1569 * wait on that I/O in bforget() - it's more efficient to wait on the I/O 1570 * only if we really need to. That happens here. 1571 */ 1572 void unmap_underlying_metadata(struct block_device *bdev, sector_t block) 1573 { 1574 struct buffer_head *old_bh; 1575 1576 might_sleep(); 1577 1578 old_bh = __find_get_block_slow(bdev, block); 1579 if (old_bh) { 1580 clear_buffer_dirty(old_bh); 1581 wait_on_buffer(old_bh); 1582 clear_buffer_req(old_bh); 1583 __brelse(old_bh); 1584 } 1585 } 1586 EXPORT_SYMBOL(unmap_underlying_metadata); 1587 1588 /* 1589 * NOTE! All mapped/uptodate combinations are valid: 1590 * 1591 * Mapped Uptodate Meaning 1592 * 1593 * No No "unknown" - must do get_block() 1594 * No Yes "hole" - zero-filled 1595 * Yes No "allocated" - allocated on disk, not read in 1596 * Yes Yes "valid" - allocated and up-to-date in memory. 1597 * 1598 * "Dirty" is valid only with the last case (mapped+uptodate). 1599 */ 1600 1601 /* 1602 * While block_write_full_page is writing back the dirty buffers under 1603 * the page lock, whoever dirtied the buffers may decide to clean them 1604 * again at any time. We handle that by only looking at the buffer 1605 * state inside lock_buffer(). 1606 * 1607 * If block_write_full_page() is called for regular writeback 1608 * (wbc->sync_mode == WB_SYNC_NONE) then it will redirty a page which has a 1609 * locked buffer. This only can happen if someone has written the buffer 1610 * directly, with submit_bh(). At the address_space level PageWriteback 1611 * prevents this contention from occurring. 1612 * 1613 * If block_write_full_page() is called with wbc->sync_mode == 1614 * WB_SYNC_ALL, the writes are posted using WRITE_SYNC_PLUG; this 1615 * causes the writes to be flagged as synchronous writes, but the 1616 * block device queue will NOT be unplugged, since usually many pages 1617 * will be pushed to the out before the higher-level caller actually 1618 * waits for the writes to be completed. The various wait functions, 1619 * such as wait_on_writeback_range() will ultimately call sync_page() 1620 * which will ultimately call blk_run_backing_dev(), which will end up 1621 * unplugging the device queue. 1622 */ 1623 static int __block_write_full_page(struct inode *inode, struct page *page, 1624 get_block_t *get_block, struct writeback_control *wbc, 1625 bh_end_io_t *handler) 1626 { 1627 int err; 1628 sector_t block; 1629 sector_t last_block; 1630 struct buffer_head *bh, *head; 1631 const unsigned blocksize = 1 << inode->i_blkbits; 1632 int nr_underway = 0; 1633 int write_op = (wbc->sync_mode == WB_SYNC_ALL ? 1634 WRITE_SYNC_PLUG : WRITE); 1635 1636 BUG_ON(!PageLocked(page)); 1637 1638 last_block = (i_size_read(inode) - 1) >> inode->i_blkbits; 1639 1640 if (!page_has_buffers(page)) { 1641 create_empty_buffers(page, blocksize, 1642 (1 << BH_Dirty)|(1 << BH_Uptodate)); 1643 } 1644 1645 /* 1646 * Be very careful. We have no exclusion from __set_page_dirty_buffers 1647 * here, and the (potentially unmapped) buffers may become dirty at 1648 * any time. If a buffer becomes dirty here after we've inspected it 1649 * then we just miss that fact, and the page stays dirty. 1650 * 1651 * Buffers outside i_size may be dirtied by __set_page_dirty_buffers; 1652 * handle that here by just cleaning them. 1653 */ 1654 1655 block = (sector_t)page->index << (PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT - inode->i_blkbits); 1656 head = page_buffers(page); 1657 bh = head; 1658 1659 /* 1660 * Get all the dirty buffers mapped to disk addresses and 1661 * handle any aliases from the underlying blockdev's mapping. 1662 */ 1663 do { 1664 if (block > last_block) { 1665 /* 1666 * mapped buffers outside i_size will occur, because 1667 * this page can be outside i_size when there is a 1668 * truncate in progress. 1669 */ 1670 /* 1671 * The buffer was zeroed by block_write_full_page() 1672 */ 1673 clear_buffer_dirty(bh); 1674 set_buffer_uptodate(bh); 1675 } else if ((!buffer_mapped(bh) || buffer_delay(bh)) && 1676 buffer_dirty(bh)) { 1677 WARN_ON(bh->b_size != blocksize); 1678 err = get_block(inode, block, bh, 1); 1679 if (err) 1680 goto recover; 1681 clear_buffer_delay(bh); 1682 if (buffer_new(bh)) { 1683 /* blockdev mappings never come here */ 1684 clear_buffer_new(bh); 1685 unmap_underlying_metadata(bh->b_bdev, 1686 bh->b_blocknr); 1687 } 1688 } 1689 bh = bh->b_this_page; 1690 block++; 1691 } while (bh != head); 1692 1693 do { 1694 if (!buffer_mapped(bh)) 1695 continue; 1696 /* 1697 * If it's a fully non-blocking write attempt and we cannot 1698 * lock the buffer then redirty the page. Note that this can 1699 * potentially cause a busy-wait loop from pdflush and kswapd 1700 * activity, but those code paths have their own higher-level 1701 * throttling. 1702 */ 1703 if (wbc->sync_mode != WB_SYNC_NONE || !wbc->nonblocking) { 1704 lock_buffer(bh); 1705 } else if (!trylock_buffer(bh)) { 1706 redirty_page_for_writepage(wbc, page); 1707 continue; 1708 } 1709 if (test_clear_buffer_dirty(bh)) { 1710 mark_buffer_async_write_endio(bh, handler); 1711 } else { 1712 unlock_buffer(bh); 1713 } 1714 } while ((bh = bh->b_this_page) != head); 1715 1716 /* 1717 * The page and its buffers are protected by PageWriteback(), so we can 1718 * drop the bh refcounts early. 1719 */ 1720 BUG_ON(PageWriteback(page)); 1721 set_page_writeback(page); 1722 1723 do { 1724 struct buffer_head *next = bh->b_this_page; 1725 if (buffer_async_write(bh)) { 1726 submit_bh(write_op, bh); 1727 nr_underway++; 1728 } 1729 bh = next; 1730 } while (bh != head); 1731 unlock_page(page); 1732 1733 err = 0; 1734 done: 1735 if (nr_underway == 0) { 1736 /* 1737 * The page was marked dirty, but the buffers were 1738 * clean. Someone wrote them back by hand with 1739 * ll_rw_block/submit_bh. A rare case. 1740 */ 1741 end_page_writeback(page); 1742 1743 /* 1744 * The page and buffer_heads can be released at any time from 1745 * here on. 1746 */ 1747 } 1748 return err; 1749 1750 recover: 1751 /* 1752 * ENOSPC, or some other error. We may already have added some 1753 * blocks to the file, so we need to write these out to avoid 1754 * exposing stale data. 1755 * The page is currently locked and not marked for writeback 1756 */ 1757 bh = head; 1758 /* Recovery: lock and submit the mapped buffers */ 1759 do { 1760 if (buffer_mapped(bh) && buffer_dirty(bh) && 1761 !buffer_delay(bh)) { 1762 lock_buffer(bh); 1763 mark_buffer_async_write_endio(bh, handler); 1764 } else { 1765 /* 1766 * The buffer may have been set dirty during 1767 * attachment to a dirty page. 1768 */ 1769 clear_buffer_dirty(bh); 1770 } 1771 } while ((bh = bh->b_this_page) != head); 1772 SetPageError(page); 1773 BUG_ON(PageWriteback(page)); 1774 mapping_set_error(page->mapping, err); 1775 set_page_writeback(page); 1776 do { 1777 struct buffer_head *next = bh->b_this_page; 1778 if (buffer_async_write(bh)) { 1779 clear_buffer_dirty(bh); 1780 submit_bh(write_op, bh); 1781 nr_underway++; 1782 } 1783 bh = next; 1784 } while (bh != head); 1785 unlock_page(page); 1786 goto done; 1787 } 1788 1789 /* 1790 * If a page has any new buffers, zero them out here, and mark them uptodate 1791 * and dirty so they'll be written out (in order to prevent uninitialised 1792 * block data from leaking). And clear the new bit. 1793 */ 1794 void page_zero_new_buffers(struct page *page, unsigned from, unsigned to) 1795 { 1796 unsigned int block_start, block_end; 1797 struct buffer_head *head, *bh; 1798 1799 BUG_ON(!PageLocked(page)); 1800 if (!page_has_buffers(page)) 1801 return; 1802 1803 bh = head = page_buffers(page); 1804 block_start = 0; 1805 do { 1806 block_end = block_start + bh->b_size; 1807 1808 if (buffer_new(bh)) { 1809 if (block_end > from && block_start < to) { 1810 if (!PageUptodate(page)) { 1811 unsigned start, size; 1812 1813 start = max(from, block_start); 1814 size = min(to, block_end) - start; 1815 1816 zero_user(page, start, size); 1817 set_buffer_uptodate(bh); 1818 } 1819 1820 clear_buffer_new(bh); 1821 mark_buffer_dirty(bh); 1822 } 1823 } 1824 1825 block_start = block_end; 1826 bh = bh->b_this_page; 1827 } while (bh != head); 1828 } 1829 EXPORT_SYMBOL(page_zero_new_buffers); 1830 1831 static int __block_prepare_write(struct inode *inode, struct page *page, 1832 unsigned from, unsigned to, get_block_t *get_block) 1833 { 1834 unsigned block_start, block_end; 1835 sector_t block; 1836 int err = 0; 1837 unsigned blocksize, bbits; 1838 struct buffer_head *bh, *head, *wait[2], **wait_bh=wait; 1839 1840 BUG_ON(!PageLocked(page)); 1841 BUG_ON(from > PAGE_CACHE_SIZE); 1842 BUG_ON(to > PAGE_CACHE_SIZE); 1843 BUG_ON(from > to); 1844 1845 blocksize = 1 << inode->i_blkbits; 1846 if (!page_has_buffers(page)) 1847 create_empty_buffers(page, blocksize, 0); 1848 head = page_buffers(page); 1849 1850 bbits = inode->i_blkbits; 1851 block = (sector_t)page->index << (PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT - bbits); 1852 1853 for(bh = head, block_start = 0; bh != head || !block_start; 1854 block++, block_start=block_end, bh = bh->b_this_page) { 1855 block_end = block_start + blocksize; 1856 if (block_end <= from || block_start >= to) { 1857 if (PageUptodate(page)) { 1858 if (!buffer_uptodate(bh)) 1859 set_buffer_uptodate(bh); 1860 } 1861 continue; 1862 } 1863 if (buffer_new(bh)) 1864 clear_buffer_new(bh); 1865 if (!buffer_mapped(bh)) { 1866 WARN_ON(bh->b_size != blocksize); 1867 err = get_block(inode, block, bh, 1); 1868 if (err) 1869 break; 1870 if (buffer_new(bh)) { 1871 unmap_underlying_metadata(bh->b_bdev, 1872 bh->b_blocknr); 1873 if (PageUptodate(page)) { 1874 clear_buffer_new(bh); 1875 set_buffer_uptodate(bh); 1876 mark_buffer_dirty(bh); 1877 continue; 1878 } 1879 if (block_end > to || block_start < from) 1880 zero_user_segments(page, 1881 to, block_end, 1882 block_start, from); 1883 continue; 1884 } 1885 } 1886 if (PageUptodate(page)) { 1887 if (!buffer_uptodate(bh)) 1888 set_buffer_uptodate(bh); 1889 continue; 1890 } 1891 if (!buffer_uptodate(bh) && !buffer_delay(bh) && 1892 !buffer_unwritten(bh) && 1893 (block_start < from || block_end > to)) { 1894 ll_rw_block(READ, 1, &bh); 1895 *wait_bh++=bh; 1896 } 1897 } 1898 /* 1899 * If we issued read requests - let them complete. 1900 */ 1901 while(wait_bh > wait) { 1902 wait_on_buffer(*--wait_bh); 1903 if (!buffer_uptodate(*wait_bh)) 1904 err = -EIO; 1905 } 1906 if (unlikely(err)) 1907 page_zero_new_buffers(page, from, to); 1908 return err; 1909 } 1910 1911 static int __block_commit_write(struct inode *inode, struct page *page, 1912 unsigned from, unsigned to) 1913 { 1914 unsigned block_start, block_end; 1915 int partial = 0; 1916 unsigned blocksize; 1917 struct buffer_head *bh, *head; 1918 1919 blocksize = 1 << inode->i_blkbits; 1920 1921 for(bh = head = page_buffers(page), block_start = 0; 1922 bh != head || !block_start; 1923 block_start=block_end, bh = bh->b_this_page) { 1924 block_end = block_start + blocksize; 1925 if (block_end <= from || block_start >= to) { 1926 if (!buffer_uptodate(bh)) 1927 partial = 1; 1928 } else { 1929 set_buffer_uptodate(bh); 1930 mark_buffer_dirty(bh); 1931 } 1932 clear_buffer_new(bh); 1933 } 1934 1935 /* 1936 * If this is a partial write which happened to make all buffers 1937 * uptodate then we can optimize away a bogus readpage() for 1938 * the next read(). Here we 'discover' whether the page went 1939 * uptodate as a result of this (potentially partial) write. 1940 */ 1941 if (!partial) 1942 SetPageUptodate(page); 1943 return 0; 1944 } 1945 1946 /* 1947 * block_write_begin takes care of the basic task of block allocation and 1948 * bringing partial write blocks uptodate first. 1949 * 1950 * If *pagep is not NULL, then block_write_begin uses the locked page 1951 * at *pagep rather than allocating its own. In this case, the page will 1952 * not be unlocked or deallocated on failure. 1953 */ 1954 int block_write_begin(struct file *file, struct address_space *mapping, 1955 loff_t pos, unsigned len, unsigned flags, 1956 struct page **pagep, void **fsdata, 1957 get_block_t *get_block) 1958 { 1959 struct inode *inode = mapping->host; 1960 int status = 0; 1961 struct page *page; 1962 pgoff_t index; 1963 unsigned start, end; 1964 int ownpage = 0; 1965 1966 index = pos >> PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT; 1967 start = pos & (PAGE_CACHE_SIZE - 1); 1968 end = start + len; 1969 1970 page = *pagep; 1971 if (page == NULL) { 1972 ownpage = 1; 1973 page = grab_cache_page_write_begin(mapping, index, flags); 1974 if (!page) { 1975 status = -ENOMEM; 1976 goto out; 1977 } 1978 *pagep = page; 1979 } else 1980 BUG_ON(!PageLocked(page)); 1981 1982 status = __block_prepare_write(inode, page, start, end, get_block); 1983 if (unlikely(status)) { 1984 ClearPageUptodate(page); 1985 1986 if (ownpage) { 1987 unlock_page(page); 1988 page_cache_release(page); 1989 *pagep = NULL; 1990 1991 /* 1992 * prepare_write() may have instantiated a few blocks 1993 * outside i_size. Trim these off again. Don't need 1994 * i_size_read because we hold i_mutex. 1995 */ 1996 if (pos + len > inode->i_size) 1997 vmtruncate(inode, inode->i_size); 1998 } 1999 } 2000 2001 out: 2002 return status; 2003 } 2004 EXPORT_SYMBOL(block_write_begin); 2005 2006 int block_write_end(struct file *file, struct address_space *mapping, 2007 loff_t pos, unsigned len, unsigned copied, 2008 struct page *page, void *fsdata) 2009 { 2010 struct inode *inode = mapping->host; 2011 unsigned start; 2012 2013 start = pos & (PAGE_CACHE_SIZE - 1); 2014 2015 if (unlikely(copied < len)) { 2016 /* 2017 * The buffers that were written will now be uptodate, so we 2018 * don't have to worry about a readpage reading them and 2019 * overwriting a partial write. However if we have encountered 2020 * a short write and only partially written into a buffer, it 2021 * will not be marked uptodate, so a readpage might come in and 2022 * destroy our partial write. 2023 * 2024 * Do the simplest thing, and just treat any short write to a 2025 * non uptodate page as a zero-length write, and force the 2026 * caller to redo the whole thing. 2027 */ 2028 if (!PageUptodate(page)) 2029 copied = 0; 2030 2031 page_zero_new_buffers(page, start+copied, start+len); 2032 } 2033 flush_dcache_page(page); 2034 2035 /* This could be a short (even 0-length) commit */ 2036 __block_commit_write(inode, page, start, start+copied); 2037 2038 return copied; 2039 } 2040 EXPORT_SYMBOL(block_write_end); 2041 2042 int generic_write_end(struct file *file, struct address_space *mapping, 2043 loff_t pos, unsigned len, unsigned copied, 2044 struct page *page, void *fsdata) 2045 { 2046 struct inode *inode = mapping->host; 2047 int i_size_changed = 0; 2048 2049 copied = block_write_end(file, mapping, pos, len, copied, page, fsdata); 2050 2051 /* 2052 * No need to use i_size_read() here, the i_size 2053 * cannot change under us because we hold i_mutex. 2054 * 2055 * But it's important to update i_size while still holding page lock: 2056 * page writeout could otherwise come in and zero beyond i_size. 2057 */ 2058 if (pos+copied > inode->i_size) { 2059 i_size_write(inode, pos+copied); 2060 i_size_changed = 1; 2061 } 2062 2063 unlock_page(page); 2064 page_cache_release(page); 2065 2066 /* 2067 * Don't mark the inode dirty under page lock. First, it unnecessarily 2068 * makes the holding time of page lock longer. Second, it forces lock 2069 * ordering of page lock and transaction start for journaling 2070 * filesystems. 2071 */ 2072 if (i_size_changed) 2073 mark_inode_dirty(inode); 2074 2075 return copied; 2076 } 2077 EXPORT_SYMBOL(generic_write_end); 2078 2079 /* 2080 * block_is_partially_uptodate checks whether buffers within a page are 2081 * uptodate or not. 2082 * 2083 * Returns true if all buffers which correspond to a file portion 2084 * we want to read are uptodate. 2085 */ 2086 int block_is_partially_uptodate(struct page *page, read_descriptor_t *desc, 2087 unsigned long from) 2088 { 2089 struct inode *inode = page->mapping->host; 2090 unsigned block_start, block_end, blocksize; 2091 unsigned to; 2092 struct buffer_head *bh, *head; 2093 int ret = 1; 2094 2095 if (!page_has_buffers(page)) 2096 return 0; 2097 2098 blocksize = 1 << inode->i_blkbits; 2099 to = min_t(unsigned, PAGE_CACHE_SIZE - from, desc->count); 2100 to = from + to; 2101 if (from < blocksize && to > PAGE_CACHE_SIZE - blocksize) 2102 return 0; 2103 2104 head = page_buffers(page); 2105 bh = head; 2106 block_start = 0; 2107 do { 2108 block_end = block_start + blocksize; 2109 if (block_end > from && block_start < to) { 2110 if (!buffer_uptodate(bh)) { 2111 ret = 0; 2112 break; 2113 } 2114 if (block_end >= to) 2115 break; 2116 } 2117 block_start = block_end; 2118 bh = bh->b_this_page; 2119 } while (bh != head); 2120 2121 return ret; 2122 } 2123 EXPORT_SYMBOL(block_is_partially_uptodate); 2124 2125 /* 2126 * Generic "read page" function for block devices that have the normal 2127 * get_block functionality. This is most of the block device filesystems. 2128 * Reads the page asynchronously --- the unlock_buffer() and 2129 * set/clear_buffer_uptodate() functions propagate buffer state into the 2130 * page struct once IO has completed. 2131 */ 2132 int block_read_full_page(struct page *page, get_block_t *get_block) 2133 { 2134 struct inode *inode = page->mapping->host; 2135 sector_t iblock, lblock; 2136 struct buffer_head *bh, *head, *arr[MAX_BUF_PER_PAGE]; 2137 unsigned int blocksize; 2138 int nr, i; 2139 int fully_mapped = 1; 2140 2141 BUG_ON(!PageLocked(page)); 2142 blocksize = 1 << inode->i_blkbits; 2143 if (!page_has_buffers(page)) 2144 create_empty_buffers(page, blocksize, 0); 2145 head = page_buffers(page); 2146 2147 iblock = (sector_t)page->index << (PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT - inode->i_blkbits); 2148 lblock = (i_size_read(inode)+blocksize-1) >> inode->i_blkbits; 2149 bh = head; 2150 nr = 0; 2151 i = 0; 2152 2153 do { 2154 if (buffer_uptodate(bh)) 2155 continue; 2156 2157 if (!buffer_mapped(bh)) { 2158 int err = 0; 2159 2160 fully_mapped = 0; 2161 if (iblock < lblock) { 2162 WARN_ON(bh->b_size != blocksize); 2163 err = get_block(inode, iblock, bh, 0); 2164 if (err) 2165 SetPageError(page); 2166 } 2167 if (!buffer_mapped(bh)) { 2168 zero_user(page, i * blocksize, blocksize); 2169 if (!err) 2170 set_buffer_uptodate(bh); 2171 continue; 2172 } 2173 /* 2174 * get_block() might have updated the buffer 2175 * synchronously 2176 */ 2177 if (buffer_uptodate(bh)) 2178 continue; 2179 } 2180 arr[nr++] = bh; 2181 } while (i++, iblock++, (bh = bh->b_this_page) != head); 2182 2183 if (fully_mapped) 2184 SetPageMappedToDisk(page); 2185 2186 if (!nr) { 2187 /* 2188 * All buffers are uptodate - we can set the page uptodate 2189 * as well. But not if get_block() returned an error. 2190 */ 2191 if (!PageError(page)) 2192 SetPageUptodate(page); 2193 unlock_page(page); 2194 return 0; 2195 } 2196 2197 /* Stage two: lock the buffers */ 2198 for (i = 0; i < nr; i++) { 2199 bh = arr[i]; 2200 lock_buffer(bh); 2201 mark_buffer_async_read(bh); 2202 } 2203 2204 /* 2205 * Stage 3: start the IO. Check for uptodateness 2206 * inside the buffer lock in case another process reading 2207 * the underlying blockdev brought it uptodate (the sct fix). 2208 */ 2209 for (i = 0; i < nr; i++) { 2210 bh = arr[i]; 2211 if (buffer_uptodate(bh)) 2212 end_buffer_async_read(bh, 1); 2213 else 2214 submit_bh(READ, bh); 2215 } 2216 return 0; 2217 } 2218 2219 /* utility function for filesystems that need to do work on expanding 2220 * truncates. Uses filesystem pagecache writes to allow the filesystem to 2221 * deal with the hole. 2222 */ 2223 int generic_cont_expand_simple(struct inode *inode, loff_t size) 2224 { 2225 struct address_space *mapping = inode->i_mapping; 2226 struct page *page; 2227 void *fsdata; 2228 unsigned long limit; 2229 int err; 2230 2231 err = -EFBIG; 2232 limit = current->signal->rlim[RLIMIT_FSIZE].rlim_cur; 2233 if (limit != RLIM_INFINITY && size > (loff_t)limit) { 2234 send_sig(SIGXFSZ, current, 0); 2235 goto out; 2236 } 2237 if (size > inode->i_sb->s_maxbytes) 2238 goto out; 2239 2240 err = pagecache_write_begin(NULL, mapping, size, 0, 2241 AOP_FLAG_UNINTERRUPTIBLE|AOP_FLAG_CONT_EXPAND, 2242 &page, &fsdata); 2243 if (err) 2244 goto out; 2245 2246 err = pagecache_write_end(NULL, mapping, size, 0, 0, page, fsdata); 2247 BUG_ON(err > 0); 2248 2249 out: 2250 return err; 2251 } 2252 2253 static int cont_expand_zero(struct file *file, struct address_space *mapping, 2254 loff_t pos, loff_t *bytes) 2255 { 2256 struct inode *inode = mapping->host; 2257 unsigned blocksize = 1 << inode->i_blkbits; 2258 struct page *page; 2259 void *fsdata; 2260 pgoff_t index, curidx; 2261 loff_t curpos; 2262 unsigned zerofrom, offset, len; 2263 int err = 0; 2264 2265 index = pos >> PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT; 2266 offset = pos & ~PAGE_CACHE_MASK; 2267 2268 while (index > (curidx = (curpos = *bytes)>>PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT)) { 2269 zerofrom = curpos & ~PAGE_CACHE_MASK; 2270 if (zerofrom & (blocksize-1)) { 2271 *bytes |= (blocksize-1); 2272 (*bytes)++; 2273 } 2274 len = PAGE_CACHE_SIZE - zerofrom; 2275 2276 err = pagecache_write_begin(file, mapping, curpos, len, 2277 AOP_FLAG_UNINTERRUPTIBLE, 2278 &page, &fsdata); 2279 if (err) 2280 goto out; 2281 zero_user(page, zerofrom, len); 2282 err = pagecache_write_end(file, mapping, curpos, len, len, 2283 page, fsdata); 2284 if (err < 0) 2285 goto out; 2286 BUG_ON(err != len); 2287 err = 0; 2288 2289 balance_dirty_pages_ratelimited(mapping); 2290 } 2291 2292 /* page covers the boundary, find the boundary offset */ 2293 if (index == curidx) { 2294 zerofrom = curpos & ~PAGE_CACHE_MASK; 2295 /* if we will expand the thing last block will be filled */ 2296 if (offset <= zerofrom) { 2297 goto out; 2298 } 2299 if (zerofrom & (blocksize-1)) { 2300 *bytes |= (blocksize-1); 2301 (*bytes)++; 2302 } 2303 len = offset - zerofrom; 2304 2305 err = pagecache_write_begin(file, mapping, curpos, len, 2306 AOP_FLAG_UNINTERRUPTIBLE, 2307 &page, &fsdata); 2308 if (err) 2309 goto out; 2310 zero_user(page, zerofrom, len); 2311 err = pagecache_write_end(file, mapping, curpos, len, len, 2312 page, fsdata); 2313 if (err < 0) 2314 goto out; 2315 BUG_ON(err != len); 2316 err = 0; 2317 } 2318 out: 2319 return err; 2320 } 2321 2322 /* 2323 * For moronic filesystems that do not allow holes in file. 2324 * We may have to extend the file. 2325 */ 2326 int cont_write_begin(struct file *file, struct address_space *mapping, 2327 loff_t pos, unsigned len, unsigned flags, 2328 struct page **pagep, void **fsdata, 2329 get_block_t *get_block, loff_t *bytes) 2330 { 2331 struct inode *inode = mapping->host; 2332 unsigned blocksize = 1 << inode->i_blkbits; 2333 unsigned zerofrom; 2334 int err; 2335 2336 err = cont_expand_zero(file, mapping, pos, bytes); 2337 if (err) 2338 goto out; 2339 2340 zerofrom = *bytes & ~PAGE_CACHE_MASK; 2341 if (pos+len > *bytes && zerofrom & (blocksize-1)) { 2342 *bytes |= (blocksize-1); 2343 (*bytes)++; 2344 } 2345 2346 *pagep = NULL; 2347 err = block_write_begin(file, mapping, pos, len, 2348 flags, pagep, fsdata, get_block); 2349 out: 2350 return err; 2351 } 2352 2353 int block_prepare_write(struct page *page, unsigned from, unsigned to, 2354 get_block_t *get_block) 2355 { 2356 struct inode *inode = page->mapping->host; 2357 int err = __block_prepare_write(inode, page, from, to, get_block); 2358 if (err) 2359 ClearPageUptodate(page); 2360 return err; 2361 } 2362 2363 int block_commit_write(struct page *page, unsigned from, unsigned to) 2364 { 2365 struct inode *inode = page->mapping->host; 2366 __block_commit_write(inode,page,from,to); 2367 return 0; 2368 } 2369 2370 /* 2371 * block_page_mkwrite() is not allowed to change the file size as it gets 2372 * called from a page fault handler when a page is first dirtied. Hence we must 2373 * be careful to check for EOF conditions here. We set the page up correctly 2374 * for a written page which means we get ENOSPC checking when writing into 2375 * holes and correct delalloc and unwritten extent mapping on filesystems that 2376 * support these features. 2377 * 2378 * We are not allowed to take the i_mutex here so we have to play games to 2379 * protect against truncate races as the page could now be beyond EOF. Because 2380 * vmtruncate() writes the inode size before removing pages, once we have the 2381 * page lock we can determine safely if the page is beyond EOF. If it is not 2382 * beyond EOF, then the page is guaranteed safe against truncation until we 2383 * unlock the page. 2384 */ 2385 int 2386 block_page_mkwrite(struct vm_area_struct *vma, struct vm_fault *vmf, 2387 get_block_t get_block) 2388 { 2389 struct page *page = vmf->page; 2390 struct inode *inode = vma->vm_file->f_path.dentry->d_inode; 2391 unsigned long end; 2392 loff_t size; 2393 int ret = VM_FAULT_NOPAGE; /* make the VM retry the fault */ 2394 2395 lock_page(page); 2396 size = i_size_read(inode); 2397 if ((page->mapping != inode->i_mapping) || 2398 (page_offset(page) > size)) { 2399 /* page got truncated out from underneath us */ 2400 goto out_unlock; 2401 } 2402 2403 /* page is wholly or partially inside EOF */ 2404 if (((page->index + 1) << PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT) > size) 2405 end = size & ~PAGE_CACHE_MASK; 2406 else 2407 end = PAGE_CACHE_SIZE; 2408 2409 ret = block_prepare_write(page, 0, end, get_block); 2410 if (!ret) 2411 ret = block_commit_write(page, 0, end); 2412 2413 if (unlikely(ret)) { 2414 if (ret == -ENOMEM) 2415 ret = VM_FAULT_OOM; 2416 else /* -ENOSPC, -EIO, etc */ 2417 ret = VM_FAULT_SIGBUS; 2418 } 2419 2420 out_unlock: 2421 unlock_page(page); 2422 return ret; 2423 } 2424 2425 /* 2426 * nobh_write_begin()'s prereads are special: the buffer_heads are freed 2427 * immediately, while under the page lock. So it needs a special end_io 2428 * handler which does not touch the bh after unlocking it. 2429 */ 2430 static void end_buffer_read_nobh(struct buffer_head *bh, int uptodate) 2431 { 2432 __end_buffer_read_notouch(bh, uptodate); 2433 } 2434 2435 /* 2436 * Attach the singly-linked list of buffers created by nobh_write_begin, to 2437 * the page (converting it to circular linked list and taking care of page 2438 * dirty races). 2439 */ 2440 static void attach_nobh_buffers(struct page *page, struct buffer_head *head) 2441 { 2442 struct buffer_head *bh; 2443 2444 BUG_ON(!PageLocked(page)); 2445 2446 spin_lock(&page->mapping->private_lock); 2447 bh = head; 2448 do { 2449 if (PageDirty(page)) 2450 set_buffer_dirty(bh); 2451 if (!bh->b_this_page) 2452 bh->b_this_page = head; 2453 bh = bh->b_this_page; 2454 } while (bh != head); 2455 attach_page_buffers(page, head); 2456 spin_unlock(&page->mapping->private_lock); 2457 } 2458 2459 /* 2460 * On entry, the page is fully not uptodate. 2461 * On exit the page is fully uptodate in the areas outside (from,to) 2462 */ 2463 int nobh_write_begin(struct file *file, struct address_space *mapping, 2464 loff_t pos, unsigned len, unsigned flags, 2465 struct page **pagep, void **fsdata, 2466 get_block_t *get_block) 2467 { 2468 struct inode *inode = mapping->host; 2469 const unsigned blkbits = inode->i_blkbits; 2470 const unsigned blocksize = 1 << blkbits; 2471 struct buffer_head *head, *bh; 2472 struct page *page; 2473 pgoff_t index; 2474 unsigned from, to; 2475 unsigned block_in_page; 2476 unsigned block_start, block_end; 2477 sector_t block_in_file; 2478 int nr_reads = 0; 2479 int ret = 0; 2480 int is_mapped_to_disk = 1; 2481 2482 index = pos >> PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT; 2483 from = pos & (PAGE_CACHE_SIZE - 1); 2484 to = from + len; 2485 2486 page = grab_cache_page_write_begin(mapping, index, flags); 2487 if (!page) 2488 return -ENOMEM; 2489 *pagep = page; 2490 *fsdata = NULL; 2491 2492 if (page_has_buffers(page)) { 2493 unlock_page(page); 2494 page_cache_release(page); 2495 *pagep = NULL; 2496 return block_write_begin(file, mapping, pos, len, flags, pagep, 2497 fsdata, get_block); 2498 } 2499 2500 if (PageMappedToDisk(page)) 2501 return 0; 2502 2503 /* 2504 * Allocate buffers so that we can keep track of state, and potentially 2505 * attach them to the page if an error occurs. In the common case of 2506 * no error, they will just be freed again without ever being attached 2507 * to the page (which is all OK, because we're under the page lock). 2508 * 2509 * Be careful: the buffer linked list is a NULL terminated one, rather 2510 * than the circular one we're used to. 2511 */ 2512 head = alloc_page_buffers(page, blocksize, 0); 2513 if (!head) { 2514 ret = -ENOMEM; 2515 goto out_release; 2516 } 2517 2518 block_in_file = (sector_t)page->index << (PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT - blkbits); 2519 2520 /* 2521 * We loop across all blocks in the page, whether or not they are 2522 * part of the affected region. This is so we can discover if the 2523 * page is fully mapped-to-disk. 2524 */ 2525 for (block_start = 0, block_in_page = 0, bh = head; 2526 block_start < PAGE_CACHE_SIZE; 2527 block_in_page++, block_start += blocksize, bh = bh->b_this_page) { 2528 int create; 2529 2530 block_end = block_start + blocksize; 2531 bh->b_state = 0; 2532 create = 1; 2533 if (block_start >= to) 2534 create = 0; 2535 ret = get_block(inode, block_in_file + block_in_page, 2536 bh, create); 2537 if (ret) 2538 goto failed; 2539 if (!buffer_mapped(bh)) 2540 is_mapped_to_disk = 0; 2541 if (buffer_new(bh)) 2542 unmap_underlying_metadata(bh->b_bdev, bh->b_blocknr); 2543 if (PageUptodate(page)) { 2544 set_buffer_uptodate(bh); 2545 continue; 2546 } 2547 if (buffer_new(bh) || !buffer_mapped(bh)) { 2548 zero_user_segments(page, block_start, from, 2549 to, block_end); 2550 continue; 2551 } 2552 if (buffer_uptodate(bh)) 2553 continue; /* reiserfs does this */ 2554 if (block_start < from || block_end > to) { 2555 lock_buffer(bh); 2556 bh->b_end_io = end_buffer_read_nobh; 2557 submit_bh(READ, bh); 2558 nr_reads++; 2559 } 2560 } 2561 2562 if (nr_reads) { 2563 /* 2564 * The page is locked, so these buffers are protected from 2565 * any VM or truncate activity. Hence we don't need to care 2566 * for the buffer_head refcounts. 2567 */ 2568 for (bh = head; bh; bh = bh->b_this_page) { 2569 wait_on_buffer(bh); 2570 if (!buffer_uptodate(bh)) 2571 ret = -EIO; 2572 } 2573 if (ret) 2574 goto failed; 2575 } 2576 2577 if (is_mapped_to_disk) 2578 SetPageMappedToDisk(page); 2579 2580 *fsdata = head; /* to be released by nobh_write_end */ 2581 2582 return 0; 2583 2584 failed: 2585 BUG_ON(!ret); 2586 /* 2587 * Error recovery is a bit difficult. We need to zero out blocks that 2588 * were newly allocated, and dirty them to ensure they get written out. 2589 * Buffers need to be attached to the page at this point, otherwise 2590 * the handling of potential IO errors during writeout would be hard 2591 * (could try doing synchronous writeout, but what if that fails too?) 2592 */ 2593 attach_nobh_buffers(page, head); 2594 page_zero_new_buffers(page, from, to); 2595 2596 out_release: 2597 unlock_page(page); 2598 page_cache_release(page); 2599 *pagep = NULL; 2600 2601 if (pos + len > inode->i_size) 2602 vmtruncate(inode, inode->i_size); 2603 2604 return ret; 2605 } 2606 EXPORT_SYMBOL(nobh_write_begin); 2607 2608 int nobh_write_end(struct file *file, struct address_space *mapping, 2609 loff_t pos, unsigned len, unsigned copied, 2610 struct page *page, void *fsdata) 2611 { 2612 struct inode *inode = page->mapping->host; 2613 struct buffer_head *head = fsdata; 2614 struct buffer_head *bh; 2615 BUG_ON(fsdata != NULL && page_has_buffers(page)); 2616 2617 if (unlikely(copied < len) && head) 2618 attach_nobh_buffers(page, head); 2619 if (page_has_buffers(page)) 2620 return generic_write_end(file, mapping, pos, len, 2621 copied, page, fsdata); 2622 2623 SetPageUptodate(page); 2624 set_page_dirty(page); 2625 if (pos+copied > inode->i_size) { 2626 i_size_write(inode, pos+copied); 2627 mark_inode_dirty(inode); 2628 } 2629 2630 unlock_page(page); 2631 page_cache_release(page); 2632 2633 while (head) { 2634 bh = head; 2635 head = head->b_this_page; 2636 free_buffer_head(bh); 2637 } 2638 2639 return copied; 2640 } 2641 EXPORT_SYMBOL(nobh_write_end); 2642 2643 /* 2644 * nobh_writepage() - based on block_full_write_page() except 2645 * that it tries to operate without attaching bufferheads to 2646 * the page. 2647 */ 2648 int nobh_writepage(struct page *page, get_block_t *get_block, 2649 struct writeback_control *wbc) 2650 { 2651 struct inode * const inode = page->mapping->host; 2652 loff_t i_size = i_size_read(inode); 2653 const pgoff_t end_index = i_size >> PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT; 2654 unsigned offset; 2655 int ret; 2656 2657 /* Is the page fully inside i_size? */ 2658 if (page->index < end_index) 2659 goto out; 2660 2661 /* Is the page fully outside i_size? (truncate in progress) */ 2662 offset = i_size & (PAGE_CACHE_SIZE-1); 2663 if (page->index >= end_index+1 || !offset) { 2664 /* 2665 * The page may have dirty, unmapped buffers. For example, 2666 * they may have been added in ext3_writepage(). Make them 2667 * freeable here, so the page does not leak. 2668 */ 2669 #if 0 2670 /* Not really sure about this - do we need this ? */ 2671 if (page->mapping->a_ops->invalidatepage) 2672 page->mapping->a_ops->invalidatepage(page, offset); 2673 #endif 2674 unlock_page(page); 2675 return 0; /* don't care */ 2676 } 2677 2678 /* 2679 * The page straddles i_size. It must be zeroed out on each and every 2680 * writepage invocation because it may be mmapped. "A file is mapped 2681 * in multiples of the page size. For a file that is not a multiple of 2682 * the page size, the remaining memory is zeroed when mapped, and 2683 * writes to that region are not written out to the file." 2684 */ 2685 zero_user_segment(page, offset, PAGE_CACHE_SIZE); 2686 out: 2687 ret = mpage_writepage(page, get_block, wbc); 2688 if (ret == -EAGAIN) 2689 ret = __block_write_full_page(inode, page, get_block, wbc, 2690 end_buffer_async_write); 2691 return ret; 2692 } 2693 EXPORT_SYMBOL(nobh_writepage); 2694 2695 int nobh_truncate_page(struct address_space *mapping, 2696 loff_t from, get_block_t *get_block) 2697 { 2698 pgoff_t index = from >> PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT; 2699 unsigned offset = from & (PAGE_CACHE_SIZE-1); 2700 unsigned blocksize; 2701 sector_t iblock; 2702 unsigned length, pos; 2703 struct inode *inode = mapping->host; 2704 struct page *page; 2705 struct buffer_head map_bh; 2706 int err; 2707 2708 blocksize = 1 << inode->i_blkbits; 2709 length = offset & (blocksize - 1); 2710 2711 /* Block boundary? Nothing to do */ 2712 if (!length) 2713 return 0; 2714 2715 length = blocksize - length; 2716 iblock = (sector_t)index << (PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT - inode->i_blkbits); 2717 2718 page = grab_cache_page(mapping, index); 2719 err = -ENOMEM; 2720 if (!page) 2721 goto out; 2722 2723 if (page_has_buffers(page)) { 2724 has_buffers: 2725 unlock_page(page); 2726 page_cache_release(page); 2727 return block_truncate_page(mapping, from, get_block); 2728 } 2729 2730 /* Find the buffer that contains "offset" */ 2731 pos = blocksize; 2732 while (offset >= pos) { 2733 iblock++; 2734 pos += blocksize; 2735 } 2736 2737 err = get_block(inode, iblock, &map_bh, 0); 2738 if (err) 2739 goto unlock; 2740 /* unmapped? It's a hole - nothing to do */ 2741 if (!buffer_mapped(&map_bh)) 2742 goto unlock; 2743 2744 /* Ok, it's mapped. Make sure it's up-to-date */ 2745 if (!PageUptodate(page)) { 2746 err = mapping->a_ops->readpage(NULL, page); 2747 if (err) { 2748 page_cache_release(page); 2749 goto out; 2750 } 2751 lock_page(page); 2752 if (!PageUptodate(page)) { 2753 err = -EIO; 2754 goto unlock; 2755 } 2756 if (page_has_buffers(page)) 2757 goto has_buffers; 2758 } 2759 zero_user(page, offset, length); 2760 set_page_dirty(page); 2761 err = 0; 2762 2763 unlock: 2764 unlock_page(page); 2765 page_cache_release(page); 2766 out: 2767 return err; 2768 } 2769 EXPORT_SYMBOL(nobh_truncate_page); 2770 2771 int block_truncate_page(struct address_space *mapping, 2772 loff_t from, get_block_t *get_block) 2773 { 2774 pgoff_t index = from >> PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT; 2775 unsigned offset = from & (PAGE_CACHE_SIZE-1); 2776 unsigned blocksize; 2777 sector_t iblock; 2778 unsigned length, pos; 2779 struct inode *inode = mapping->host; 2780 struct page *page; 2781 struct buffer_head *bh; 2782 int err; 2783 2784 blocksize = 1 << inode->i_blkbits; 2785 length = offset & (blocksize - 1); 2786 2787 /* Block boundary? Nothing to do */ 2788 if (!length) 2789 return 0; 2790 2791 length = blocksize - length; 2792 iblock = (sector_t)index << (PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT - inode->i_blkbits); 2793 2794 page = grab_cache_page(mapping, index); 2795 err = -ENOMEM; 2796 if (!page) 2797 goto out; 2798 2799 if (!page_has_buffers(page)) 2800 create_empty_buffers(page, blocksize, 0); 2801 2802 /* Find the buffer that contains "offset" */ 2803 bh = page_buffers(page); 2804 pos = blocksize; 2805 while (offset >= pos) { 2806 bh = bh->b_this_page; 2807 iblock++; 2808 pos += blocksize; 2809 } 2810 2811 err = 0; 2812 if (!buffer_mapped(bh)) { 2813 WARN_ON(bh->b_size != blocksize); 2814 err = get_block(inode, iblock, bh, 0); 2815 if (err) 2816 goto unlock; 2817 /* unmapped? It's a hole - nothing to do */ 2818 if (!buffer_mapped(bh)) 2819 goto unlock; 2820 } 2821 2822 /* Ok, it's mapped. Make sure it's up-to-date */ 2823 if (PageUptodate(page)) 2824 set_buffer_uptodate(bh); 2825 2826 if (!buffer_uptodate(bh) && !buffer_delay(bh) && !buffer_unwritten(bh)) { 2827 err = -EIO; 2828 ll_rw_block(READ, 1, &bh); 2829 wait_on_buffer(bh); 2830 /* Uhhuh. Read error. Complain and punt. */ 2831 if (!buffer_uptodate(bh)) 2832 goto unlock; 2833 } 2834 2835 zero_user(page, offset, length); 2836 mark_buffer_dirty(bh); 2837 err = 0; 2838 2839 unlock: 2840 unlock_page(page); 2841 page_cache_release(page); 2842 out: 2843 return err; 2844 } 2845 2846 /* 2847 * The generic ->writepage function for buffer-backed address_spaces 2848 * this form passes in the end_io handler used to finish the IO. 2849 */ 2850 int block_write_full_page_endio(struct page *page, get_block_t *get_block, 2851 struct writeback_control *wbc, bh_end_io_t *handler) 2852 { 2853 struct inode * const inode = page->mapping->host; 2854 loff_t i_size = i_size_read(inode); 2855 const pgoff_t end_index = i_size >> PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT; 2856 unsigned offset; 2857 2858 /* Is the page fully inside i_size? */ 2859 if (page->index < end_index) 2860 return __block_write_full_page(inode, page, get_block, wbc, 2861 handler); 2862 2863 /* Is the page fully outside i_size? (truncate in progress) */ 2864 offset = i_size & (PAGE_CACHE_SIZE-1); 2865 if (page->index >= end_index+1 || !offset) { 2866 /* 2867 * The page may have dirty, unmapped buffers. For example, 2868 * they may have been added in ext3_writepage(). Make them 2869 * freeable here, so the page does not leak. 2870 */ 2871 do_invalidatepage(page, 0); 2872 unlock_page(page); 2873 return 0; /* don't care */ 2874 } 2875 2876 /* 2877 * The page straddles i_size. It must be zeroed out on each and every 2878 * writepage invokation because it may be mmapped. "A file is mapped 2879 * in multiples of the page size. For a file that is not a multiple of 2880 * the page size, the remaining memory is zeroed when mapped, and 2881 * writes to that region are not written out to the file." 2882 */ 2883 zero_user_segment(page, offset, PAGE_CACHE_SIZE); 2884 return __block_write_full_page(inode, page, get_block, wbc, handler); 2885 } 2886 2887 /* 2888 * The generic ->writepage function for buffer-backed address_spaces 2889 */ 2890 int block_write_full_page(struct page *page, get_block_t *get_block, 2891 struct writeback_control *wbc) 2892 { 2893 return block_write_full_page_endio(page, get_block, wbc, 2894 end_buffer_async_write); 2895 } 2896 2897 2898 sector_t generic_block_bmap(struct address_space *mapping, sector_t block, 2899 get_block_t *get_block) 2900 { 2901 struct buffer_head tmp; 2902 struct inode *inode = mapping->host; 2903 tmp.b_state = 0; 2904 tmp.b_blocknr = 0; 2905 tmp.b_size = 1 << inode->i_blkbits; 2906 get_block(inode, block, &tmp, 0); 2907 return tmp.b_blocknr; 2908 } 2909 2910 static void end_bio_bh_io_sync(struct bio *bio, int err) 2911 { 2912 struct buffer_head *bh = bio->bi_private; 2913 2914 if (err == -EOPNOTSUPP) { 2915 set_bit(BIO_EOPNOTSUPP, &bio->bi_flags); 2916 set_bit(BH_Eopnotsupp, &bh->b_state); 2917 } 2918 2919 if (unlikely (test_bit(BIO_QUIET,&bio->bi_flags))) 2920 set_bit(BH_Quiet, &bh->b_state); 2921 2922 bh->b_end_io(bh, test_bit(BIO_UPTODATE, &bio->bi_flags)); 2923 bio_put(bio); 2924 } 2925 2926 int submit_bh(int rw, struct buffer_head * bh) 2927 { 2928 struct bio *bio; 2929 int ret = 0; 2930 2931 BUG_ON(!buffer_locked(bh)); 2932 BUG_ON(!buffer_mapped(bh)); 2933 BUG_ON(!bh->b_end_io); 2934 2935 /* 2936 * Mask in barrier bit for a write (could be either a WRITE or a 2937 * WRITE_SYNC 2938 */ 2939 if (buffer_ordered(bh) && (rw & WRITE)) 2940 rw |= WRITE_BARRIER; 2941 2942 /* 2943 * Only clear out a write error when rewriting 2944 */ 2945 if (test_set_buffer_req(bh) && (rw & WRITE)) 2946 clear_buffer_write_io_error(bh); 2947 2948 /* 2949 * from here on down, it's all bio -- do the initial mapping, 2950 * submit_bio -> generic_make_request may further map this bio around 2951 */ 2952 bio = bio_alloc(GFP_NOIO, 1); 2953 2954 bio->bi_sector = bh->b_blocknr * (bh->b_size >> 9); 2955 bio->bi_bdev = bh->b_bdev; 2956 bio->bi_io_vec[0].bv_page = bh->b_page; 2957 bio->bi_io_vec[0].bv_len = bh->b_size; 2958 bio->bi_io_vec[0].bv_offset = bh_offset(bh); 2959 2960 bio->bi_vcnt = 1; 2961 bio->bi_idx = 0; 2962 bio->bi_size = bh->b_size; 2963 2964 bio->bi_end_io = end_bio_bh_io_sync; 2965 bio->bi_private = bh; 2966 2967 bio_get(bio); 2968 submit_bio(rw, bio); 2969 2970 if (bio_flagged(bio, BIO_EOPNOTSUPP)) 2971 ret = -EOPNOTSUPP; 2972 2973 bio_put(bio); 2974 return ret; 2975 } 2976 2977 /** 2978 * ll_rw_block: low-level access to block devices (DEPRECATED) 2979 * @rw: whether to %READ or %WRITE or %SWRITE or maybe %READA (readahead) 2980 * @nr: number of &struct buffer_heads in the array 2981 * @bhs: array of pointers to &struct buffer_head 2982 * 2983 * ll_rw_block() takes an array of pointers to &struct buffer_heads, and 2984 * requests an I/O operation on them, either a %READ or a %WRITE. The third 2985 * %SWRITE is like %WRITE only we make sure that the *current* data in buffers 2986 * are sent to disk. The fourth %READA option is described in the documentation 2987 * for generic_make_request() which ll_rw_block() calls. 2988 * 2989 * This function drops any buffer that it cannot get a lock on (with the 2990 * BH_Lock state bit) unless SWRITE is required, any buffer that appears to be 2991 * clean when doing a write request, and any buffer that appears to be 2992 * up-to-date when doing read request. Further it marks as clean buffers that 2993 * are processed for writing (the buffer cache won't assume that they are 2994 * actually clean until the buffer gets unlocked). 2995 * 2996 * ll_rw_block sets b_end_io to simple completion handler that marks 2997 * the buffer up-to-date (if approriate), unlocks the buffer and wakes 2998 * any waiters. 2999 * 3000 * All of the buffers must be for the same device, and must also be a 3001 * multiple of the current approved size for the device. 3002 */ 3003 void ll_rw_block(int rw, int nr, struct buffer_head *bhs[]) 3004 { 3005 int i; 3006 3007 for (i = 0; i < nr; i++) { 3008 struct buffer_head *bh = bhs[i]; 3009 3010 if (rw == SWRITE || rw == SWRITE_SYNC || rw == SWRITE_SYNC_PLUG) 3011 lock_buffer(bh); 3012 else if (!trylock_buffer(bh)) 3013 continue; 3014 3015 if (rw == WRITE || rw == SWRITE || rw == SWRITE_SYNC || 3016 rw == SWRITE_SYNC_PLUG) { 3017 if (test_clear_buffer_dirty(bh)) { 3018 bh->b_end_io = end_buffer_write_sync; 3019 get_bh(bh); 3020 if (rw == SWRITE_SYNC) 3021 submit_bh(WRITE_SYNC, bh); 3022 else 3023 submit_bh(WRITE, bh); 3024 continue; 3025 } 3026 } else { 3027 if (!buffer_uptodate(bh)) { 3028 bh->b_end_io = end_buffer_read_sync; 3029 get_bh(bh); 3030 submit_bh(rw, bh); 3031 continue; 3032 } 3033 } 3034 unlock_buffer(bh); 3035 } 3036 } 3037 3038 /* 3039 * For a data-integrity writeout, we need to wait upon any in-progress I/O 3040 * and then start new I/O and then wait upon it. The caller must have a ref on 3041 * the buffer_head. 3042 */ 3043 int sync_dirty_buffer(struct buffer_head *bh) 3044 { 3045 int ret = 0; 3046 3047 WARN_ON(atomic_read(&bh->b_count) < 1); 3048 lock_buffer(bh); 3049 if (test_clear_buffer_dirty(bh)) { 3050 get_bh(bh); 3051 bh->b_end_io = end_buffer_write_sync; 3052 ret = submit_bh(WRITE_SYNC, bh); 3053 wait_on_buffer(bh); 3054 if (buffer_eopnotsupp(bh)) { 3055 clear_buffer_eopnotsupp(bh); 3056 ret = -EOPNOTSUPP; 3057 } 3058 if (!ret && !buffer_uptodate(bh)) 3059 ret = -EIO; 3060 } else { 3061 unlock_buffer(bh); 3062 } 3063 return ret; 3064 } 3065 3066 /* 3067 * try_to_free_buffers() checks if all the buffers on this particular page 3068 * are unused, and releases them if so. 3069 * 3070 * Exclusion against try_to_free_buffers may be obtained by either 3071 * locking the page or by holding its mapping's private_lock. 3072 * 3073 * If the page is dirty but all the buffers are clean then we need to 3074 * be sure to mark the page clean as well. This is because the page 3075 * may be against a block device, and a later reattachment of buffers 3076 * to a dirty page will set *all* buffers dirty. Which would corrupt 3077 * filesystem data on the same device. 3078 * 3079 * The same applies to regular filesystem pages: if all the buffers are 3080 * clean then we set the page clean and proceed. To do that, we require 3081 * total exclusion from __set_page_dirty_buffers(). That is obtained with 3082 * private_lock. 3083 * 3084 * try_to_free_buffers() is non-blocking. 3085 */ 3086 static inline int buffer_busy(struct buffer_head *bh) 3087 { 3088 return atomic_read(&bh->b_count) | 3089 (bh->b_state & ((1 << BH_Dirty) | (1 << BH_Lock))); 3090 } 3091 3092 static int 3093 drop_buffers(struct page *page, struct buffer_head **buffers_to_free) 3094 { 3095 struct buffer_head *head = page_buffers(page); 3096 struct buffer_head *bh; 3097 3098 bh = head; 3099 do { 3100 if (buffer_write_io_error(bh) && page->mapping) 3101 set_bit(AS_EIO, &page->mapping->flags); 3102 if (buffer_busy(bh)) 3103 goto failed; 3104 bh = bh->b_this_page; 3105 } while (bh != head); 3106 3107 do { 3108 struct buffer_head *next = bh->b_this_page; 3109 3110 if (bh->b_assoc_map) 3111 __remove_assoc_queue(bh); 3112 bh = next; 3113 } while (bh != head); 3114 *buffers_to_free = head; 3115 __clear_page_buffers(page); 3116 return 1; 3117 failed: 3118 return 0; 3119 } 3120 3121 int try_to_free_buffers(struct page *page) 3122 { 3123 struct address_space * const mapping = page->mapping; 3124 struct buffer_head *buffers_to_free = NULL; 3125 int ret = 0; 3126 3127 BUG_ON(!PageLocked(page)); 3128 if (PageWriteback(page)) 3129 return 0; 3130 3131 if (mapping == NULL) { /* can this still happen? */ 3132 ret = drop_buffers(page, &buffers_to_free); 3133 goto out; 3134 } 3135 3136 spin_lock(&mapping->private_lock); 3137 ret = drop_buffers(page, &buffers_to_free); 3138 3139 /* 3140 * If the filesystem writes its buffers by hand (eg ext3) 3141 * then we can have clean buffers against a dirty page. We 3142 * clean the page here; otherwise the VM will never notice 3143 * that the filesystem did any IO at all. 3144 * 3145 * Also, during truncate, discard_buffer will have marked all 3146 * the page's buffers clean. We discover that here and clean 3147 * the page also. 3148 * 3149 * private_lock must be held over this entire operation in order 3150 * to synchronise against __set_page_dirty_buffers and prevent the 3151 * dirty bit from being lost. 3152 */ 3153 if (ret) 3154 cancel_dirty_page(page, PAGE_CACHE_SIZE); 3155 spin_unlock(&mapping->private_lock); 3156 out: 3157 if (buffers_to_free) { 3158 struct buffer_head *bh = buffers_to_free; 3159 3160 do { 3161 struct buffer_head *next = bh->b_this_page; 3162 free_buffer_head(bh); 3163 bh = next; 3164 } while (bh != buffers_to_free); 3165 } 3166 return ret; 3167 } 3168 EXPORT_SYMBOL(try_to_free_buffers); 3169 3170 void block_sync_page(struct page *page) 3171 { 3172 struct address_space *mapping; 3173 3174 smp_mb(); 3175 mapping = page_mapping(page); 3176 if (mapping) 3177 blk_run_backing_dev(mapping->backing_dev_info, page); 3178 } 3179 3180 /* 3181 * There are no bdflush tunables left. But distributions are 3182 * still running obsolete flush daemons, so we terminate them here. 3183 * 3184 * Use of bdflush() is deprecated and will be removed in a future kernel. 3185 * The `pdflush' kernel threads fully replace bdflush daemons and this call. 3186 */ 3187 SYSCALL_DEFINE2(bdflush, int, func, long, data) 3188 { 3189 static int msg_count; 3190 3191 if (!capable(CAP_SYS_ADMIN)) 3192 return -EPERM; 3193 3194 if (msg_count < 5) { 3195 msg_count++; 3196 printk(KERN_INFO 3197 "warning: process `%s' used the obsolete bdflush" 3198 " system call\n", current->comm); 3199 printk(KERN_INFO "Fix your initscripts?\n"); 3200 } 3201 3202 if (func == 1) 3203 do_exit(0); 3204 return 0; 3205 } 3206 3207 /* 3208 * Buffer-head allocation 3209 */ 3210 static struct kmem_cache *bh_cachep; 3211 3212 /* 3213 * Once the number of bh's in the machine exceeds this level, we start 3214 * stripping them in writeback. 3215 */ 3216 static int max_buffer_heads; 3217 3218 int buffer_heads_over_limit; 3219 3220 struct bh_accounting { 3221 int nr; /* Number of live bh's */ 3222 int ratelimit; /* Limit cacheline bouncing */ 3223 }; 3224 3225 static DEFINE_PER_CPU(struct bh_accounting, bh_accounting) = {0, 0}; 3226 3227 static void recalc_bh_state(void) 3228 { 3229 int i; 3230 int tot = 0; 3231 3232 if (__get_cpu_var(bh_accounting).ratelimit++ < 4096) 3233 return; 3234 __get_cpu_var(bh_accounting).ratelimit = 0; 3235 for_each_online_cpu(i) 3236 tot += per_cpu(bh_accounting, i).nr; 3237 buffer_heads_over_limit = (tot > max_buffer_heads); 3238 } 3239 3240 struct buffer_head *alloc_buffer_head(gfp_t gfp_flags) 3241 { 3242 struct buffer_head *ret = kmem_cache_alloc(bh_cachep, gfp_flags); 3243 if (ret) { 3244 INIT_LIST_HEAD(&ret->b_assoc_buffers); 3245 get_cpu_var(bh_accounting).nr++; 3246 recalc_bh_state(); 3247 put_cpu_var(bh_accounting); 3248 } 3249 return ret; 3250 } 3251 EXPORT_SYMBOL(alloc_buffer_head); 3252 3253 void free_buffer_head(struct buffer_head *bh) 3254 { 3255 BUG_ON(!list_empty(&bh->b_assoc_buffers)); 3256 kmem_cache_free(bh_cachep, bh); 3257 get_cpu_var(bh_accounting).nr--; 3258 recalc_bh_state(); 3259 put_cpu_var(bh_accounting); 3260 } 3261 EXPORT_SYMBOL(free_buffer_head); 3262 3263 static void buffer_exit_cpu(int cpu) 3264 { 3265 int i; 3266 struct bh_lru *b = &per_cpu(bh_lrus, cpu); 3267 3268 for (i = 0; i < BH_LRU_SIZE; i++) { 3269 brelse(b->bhs[i]); 3270 b->bhs[i] = NULL; 3271 } 3272 get_cpu_var(bh_accounting).nr += per_cpu(bh_accounting, cpu).nr; 3273 per_cpu(bh_accounting, cpu).nr = 0; 3274 put_cpu_var(bh_accounting); 3275 } 3276 3277 static int buffer_cpu_notify(struct notifier_block *self, 3278 unsigned long action, void *hcpu) 3279 { 3280 if (action == CPU_DEAD || action == CPU_DEAD_FROZEN) 3281 buffer_exit_cpu((unsigned long)hcpu); 3282 return NOTIFY_OK; 3283 } 3284 3285 /** 3286 * bh_uptodate_or_lock - Test whether the buffer is uptodate 3287 * @bh: struct buffer_head 3288 * 3289 * Return true if the buffer is up-to-date and false, 3290 * with the buffer locked, if not. 3291 */ 3292 int bh_uptodate_or_lock(struct buffer_head *bh) 3293 { 3294 if (!buffer_uptodate(bh)) { 3295 lock_buffer(bh); 3296 if (!buffer_uptodate(bh)) 3297 return 0; 3298 unlock_buffer(bh); 3299 } 3300 return 1; 3301 } 3302 EXPORT_SYMBOL(bh_uptodate_or_lock); 3303 3304 /** 3305 * bh_submit_read - Submit a locked buffer for reading 3306 * @bh: struct buffer_head 3307 * 3308 * Returns zero on success and -EIO on error. 3309 */ 3310 int bh_submit_read(struct buffer_head *bh) 3311 { 3312 BUG_ON(!buffer_locked(bh)); 3313 3314 if (buffer_uptodate(bh)) { 3315 unlock_buffer(bh); 3316 return 0; 3317 } 3318 3319 get_bh(bh); 3320 bh->b_end_io = end_buffer_read_sync; 3321 submit_bh(READ, bh); 3322 wait_on_buffer(bh); 3323 if (buffer_uptodate(bh)) 3324 return 0; 3325 return -EIO; 3326 } 3327 EXPORT_SYMBOL(bh_submit_read); 3328 3329 static void 3330 init_buffer_head(void *data) 3331 { 3332 struct buffer_head *bh = data; 3333 3334 memset(bh, 0, sizeof(*bh)); 3335 INIT_LIST_HEAD(&bh->b_assoc_buffers); 3336 } 3337 3338 void __init buffer_init(void) 3339 { 3340 int nrpages; 3341 3342 bh_cachep = kmem_cache_create("buffer_head", 3343 sizeof(struct buffer_head), 0, 3344 (SLAB_RECLAIM_ACCOUNT|SLAB_PANIC| 3345 SLAB_MEM_SPREAD), 3346 init_buffer_head); 3347 3348 /* 3349 * Limit the bh occupancy to 10% of ZONE_NORMAL 3350 */ 3351 nrpages = (nr_free_buffer_pages() * 10) / 100; 3352 max_buffer_heads = nrpages * (PAGE_SIZE / sizeof(struct buffer_head)); 3353 hotcpu_notifier(buffer_cpu_notify, 0); 3354 } 3355 3356 EXPORT_SYMBOL(__bforget); 3357 EXPORT_SYMBOL(__brelse); 3358 EXPORT_SYMBOL(__wait_on_buffer); 3359 EXPORT_SYMBOL(block_commit_write); 3360 EXPORT_SYMBOL(block_prepare_write); 3361 EXPORT_SYMBOL(block_page_mkwrite); 3362 EXPORT_SYMBOL(block_read_full_page); 3363 EXPORT_SYMBOL(block_sync_page); 3364 EXPORT_SYMBOL(block_truncate_page); 3365 EXPORT_SYMBOL(block_write_full_page); 3366 EXPORT_SYMBOL(block_write_full_page_endio); 3367 EXPORT_SYMBOL(cont_write_begin); 3368 EXPORT_SYMBOL(end_buffer_read_sync); 3369 EXPORT_SYMBOL(end_buffer_write_sync); 3370 EXPORT_SYMBOL(end_buffer_async_write); 3371 EXPORT_SYMBOL(file_fsync); 3372 EXPORT_SYMBOL(generic_block_bmap); 3373 EXPORT_SYMBOL(generic_cont_expand_simple); 3374 EXPORT_SYMBOL(init_buffer); 3375 EXPORT_SYMBOL(invalidate_bdev); 3376 EXPORT_SYMBOL(ll_rw_block); 3377 EXPORT_SYMBOL(mark_buffer_dirty); 3378 EXPORT_SYMBOL(submit_bh); 3379 EXPORT_SYMBOL(sync_dirty_buffer); 3380 EXPORT_SYMBOL(unlock_buffer); 3381